Jambalaya [yearbook] 1968

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NEW UriLLnfiiJ . . Queen of the Mississippi, cradle of jazz, iiome of ttie Mardi
Gras, ttie Quarter, Bourbon Street, the Garden District and Tulane. The city has a magic
charm for the'^newcomer. But the wonder of the tourist wears off quicldy and you never
go to Bourbon ^reet except to play guide for parents and friends. A new New Orleans
replaces the fad^ ideals of summer. There are urban slums, traffic problems, and a laugh-able
municipal government. As you leave Tulane, New Orleans has a different meaning. But
no one who has sailed on Lake Ponchartrain or walked a lazy sunset through the oaks in
'Audubon Park can leave without remembering a city with a strong and distinctive character
that, for a brief period in a young life, was home. 5 ;
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CONTENTS
SPORTS 26
BEAUTY 72
LEADERSHIP 86
CLASSES 116
ORGANIZATIONS 210
GREEKS 250
MILITARY 312
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It would be futile to attempt a description of tlie pe-culiar
and personel collection of architecture, oaks, music
and "wliere y'at" that has come to be called New Orleans.
It's not so much a place as a state of mind, and each man
has his own opinion, an opinion certain to be different from
any other. We can only recall a few of the images that
contribute to this potpouri with the understanding that you
know the city better than anyone else.
There is the New Orleans of azaleas, streetcars, and
the Garden District. This is the city most immediate to
Tulane. Some say that it is an irrelevant Camelot, a retreat
form reality, avoiding the important issues of the day, de-termined
to be uninvolved with anything more remote than
Napoleon Avenue. Perhaps it is, but every Tulanian knows
the value of a quiet walk through Audubon Park after a
particularly difficult examination; or what it is to ride a
wood-creaking trolley speeding open windowed through an
early spring evening.
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I HE city plies a tourist trade. Tliere is the New Orleans of the Quarter
and noise; one first seen, but when known, found shallow.
Curiosity brings you to the Jet and through the bush country to
that mecca of madness. Here in one spot, as though through some pecu-liar
conjunction of the planets, are found together the famous and
venerable Grubby Hot Dog Venders with Dirty Aprons, Lynda Bridgette,
and the world's largest stripper (378 pounds, dripping sweat).
The place is fun, but some find it tiring. The music is exciting,
heard once, but when the "Saints" and "Basin Street Blues" become
marketable commodities supplied on demand, a certain amount of spon-taneity
necessarily is lost.
A sometime place for fun, a full time place for some, but Mardi Gras
comes apace and beer and wine and people and plastic beads are gathered
by forces little understood. Play-drink-sing-enjoy, for tomorrow is Ash
Wednesday and very far away.
I HERE is another city. It is more difficult to find, hidden
as it is between the glitter and light of the others, but it was
there all the while. It does not demand attention, but it de-serves
it. There are people here, people worth kifowing: the
women in the French Market sorting onions at dawn; the shop-keepers
along Prytania; the musicians who will play if they
please and not one minute before.
This city is where the others were, but at different hours
and in a different style. As you leave New Orleans you will
remember the Quarter and the sparkle, but you will treasure
the beret topped ancient who spoke with you one Sunday morn-ing
in Jackson Square about the days when . . .
Change is not unusual for this city. For all her tradition
and mustiness. New Orleans changes daily as we learn of a
part we overlooked yesterday and wonder what new discoveries
lie hidden in tomorrow.
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26
H YEAR of hope and a year of disappointment, but a
year of interesting and exciting athletic contests at Tulane.
Returning students in September staggered out of
fraternity rush week and orientation into the opening of
the football season with hopes high and a prospective
bowl bid waiting in November. The fans at the Saturday
night games have changed a good deal since Coach Jim
Pittman took over. Where once it was the fashion to use
a football game as an excuse for a floor show and have
a thousand private parties scheduled in the stands from
eight to ten p.m., the average student now cares about
the game, for it is a game worth caring about, not only
for the team but for the university, for the prestige which
surrounds a top football team rubs off on the school, and,
for all the talk about the national reputation of Tulane,
our prestige in sports circles is only fair, at best. This
past year, disappointing losses to several weaker teams
forced the Tulane fan to look forward to basketball which
promised to be a real success after last year's 14-10 record.
As was the story with football, the basketball team was
overrated, suffered disappointing early losses and when
Coach Ralph Pederson was replaced by Tom Nissaike in
mid-season because of illness, a six-game losing streak
greeted the frosh mentor before the team settled down
and won seven of their last ten.
Seeming to follow the lead of the two major teams,
most of the other varsity squads attained a high level of
mediocrity, which, at this university anyway, is a distinct
improvement over the recent teams in the minor SDOrtS.
The baseball team had its problems with a new coach
and the loss of valuable veterans, but gave a creditable
performance as they wait for this year's freshman and
sophomores to develop. The track, golf and swimming teams
did not set the world on fire, although several individuals
came through with excellent performances so that the Green
Wave was not humiliated in any instance.
The tennis team still possessed one of the strongest
dual meet squads in the country, having an undefeated
season, and when tournament time came around, they man-aged
to hold on to ninth place in the country despite
disappointing losses in several championship matches.
Individually, several outstanding stars have recently
been developed at Tulane. First among them is of course
Bobby Duhon, who was chosen as a pre-season Ail-American
and, after completing a recordbreaking career at Tulane,
signed with the New York Football Giants, who chose him
in the third round of the draft.
In tennis, Turner Howard in singles and Lee Kantrow
and Richard Carter in doubles were fighting for national
championships last spring and Howard looks like a good
bet to capture a major title before leaving Tulane.
Of the several Tulane baseball players signing con-tracts
over the last two years, there is one who just might
make the major leagues this summer. That is Bobby Darrah
with the Yankees. This year Bobby is with Syracuse in the
AAA International League and could be brought up towards
the end of the season.
So there is hope. With the development of the young
players and the help of the veterans, it seems that a
winning tradition will reappear at Tulane, a tradition which
should have reappeared this past year.
27
28
VARSITY SPORTS
FOOTBALL
29
30
VARSITY SPORTS
FOOTBALL
31
VARSITY FOOTBALL
MIAMI (OHIO) AND NORTH CAROLINA
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Above: Wingback Jimmy Trahan (29) runs over Miami's Darr Gerliardt on his
way to a three yard picl<up in the third quarter; Right: Trahan trips over fuil-bacl(
Tim Coughlin (35) for four yards this time as the Wave rolis forvirard
toward the goai line in the first period; Beiow: iVIiami end Sid Steiner gets
dragged down after an eleven yard pickup by Jim Jancik (14), John Snell (73)
Lou Campomenosi (22), Bruce Guidry (39) and IVIaurice Gartman (38); Opposite,
above: Uwe Pontius (56) kicks a first period field goal to start the Wave
scormg in the biggest victory of the year; Opposite, middle: Strong end Sid
Jones (88) pulls down a 13 yard Duhon pass as Tulane moves toward its first
touchdown in the first period; Opposite, below: Tailback Wayne Francingues
(10) goes over the Carolina line for three yards on the first touchdown march
32
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|n the first encounter of the 1967 season, the Green Wave
took on the once defeated Miami of Ohio Redsldns at Tulane
Stadium. Tulane won the toss, tool< the opening kicl(off, and
drove down to the Redskins 22 yard line. At this point, the
offense bogged down, but on fourth down, Uwe Pontius kicked
a 22 yard field goal and the Green Wave led 3-0. Although this
drive seemed to indicate that the Wave could move at will
against the Redskins, never again could Bobby Duhon bring
Tulane near the goal line. Miami, led by quarterback Kent
Thompson and powerful, quick running backs, pushed across the
Greenie goal line once in each half and took home a 14-3
victory. This was a disappointing season opener for the Wave,
which was looking forward to a quick start after their fine
showing in 1966. But the team had little time to dwell on
this loss as they had to start preparation for the first road
trip of the year a week later against North Carolina.
The Green Wave bounced back smartly from the Miami
defeat by rolling over the North Carolina Tarheels 36-11 at
Chapel Hill in front of a local New Orleans television audience.
Tulane piled up more than 250 yards on the ground and 336
overall, plus five touchdowns, in completely outclassing the
Atlantic Coast Conference Tarheels. Uwe Pontius once again
drew first blood when he kicked a 28 yard field goal early in
the first period. The Geenies then put the game out of reach
when Jimmy Trahan scored the first touchdown of the year, pre-ceding
scores by Sid Jones, Chuck Loftin, Jim Darnley and a
beautiful touchdown run by linebacker Bruce Guidry after an
N.C. punt which was blocked by Scott Haber. Late in the third
quarter, North Carolina began to show some sort of offense,
but by this time the game was out of reach and the Wave came
away with its first win of the season and the promise of many
more to follow.
These first two games provided a startling contrast which
was to characterize the football fortunes of he Tulane Green
Wave throughout the season. Time and again, the Wave faltered
when favored, as they surely did against Miami of Ohio, and,
when prospects often indicated either an even game or a pos-sible
loss, they rose to heights many thought them incapable
of obtaining. But foresight is not an outstanding characteristic
of most people connected with sports, and Tulane looked forward
to Miami of Florida with a great deal of confidence.
33
VARSITY FOOTBALL
MIAMI AND FLORIDA
Above: Bobby Duhon gets pushed back from the Miami goal line in the
third quarter as the final hope for a Wave comeback is crushed: Right:
Soaking wet and dirty, Tulane's front line of Guidry (39), Browning (74),
Eumont (63), Hardnett (69), Gartman (37) and Dembinski (72) wait for the
Miami offense in the fourth period; Opposite, left: Running an option
play around Florida's left end, quarterback Warren Bankston goes for
seven yards early in the second quarter; Opposite, right: Nothing could
be more typical of the Florida game than this fumble by Bankston,
recovered by Gator Jackie Alltmont (27), for Tulane was unable to do
anything quite right the whole game; Opposite, below: The Florida line
opens a hugh hole as All-S.E.C. fullback Larry Smith sweeps past McAfee
(38) and Eumont (63) for a touchdown in the 35-0 rout.
I HE Wave in a valiant effort, lield tlie strong Miami Hurricanes
for thirty minutes before falling in a rain-soalted game played
in tlie Orange Bowl. Ttie first tialf was marked by brilliant play
by the Green Wave defense and quarterback Bobby Duhon made
sure that it was not in vain as he led the Greenies down the
field for two touchdowns, scoring both of them himself on
runs of seven and 27 yards. Uwe Pontius capped both drives
with extra points and Tulane took a 14-7 lead into the dressing
room at halftime. With the opening of the second half came
the rain, and the Hurricanes seemed to be revitalized by the
wet conditions as they started to move the ball consistently
both on the ground and in the air. Their great depth was a
big factor. They never seemed to run out of fresh players to
put in against the tiring Wave and proceeded to add 27 points
to make the final score 34-14. Tulane showed, however, that
they could handle a talented, bigger team, but the Miami depth
and the rain combined to run the Wave's record to 1-2.
In its fourth outing of the year, the Green Wave was over-powered
35-0 by a stronger and larger University of Florida
team at Tulane Stadium. All night long Florida's substitute
quarterback Larry Rentz guided the Gators through the porous
Tulane defense. The only high points of the game were the
two punts blocked by defensive end Scott Haber and the punting
of Lloyd Pye. The team did not seem to possess the fire which
was needed to successfully combat the Gators, and Florida,
aided by the psychological lift of finding a competent quarter-back
to replace injured Jackie Eckdahl, simply overwhelmed
the Wave. On Florida's first play from scrimmage, Tulane was
called for interference with the Gator's all-SEC end Richard
Trapp and as a result they netted 43 yards. From that point
on, Florida was in completed control of the game. Tulane was
unable to muster enough steam for a sustained drive and the
defense was not able to contain the strong Gator offense.
34
35
VARSITY FOOTBALL
AFR FORCE AND GEORGIA TECH
Above: Tailback Chuck Loftin (44) gets crushed by the Air Force forward
wall after a two yard pickup in the fourth period as Bobby Duhon (13)
prepares to do a wrist stand in the foreground; Below: Quarterback
Duhon gets set to roll around Air Force's right end as he eludes
linebacker Fein (69); Right: Georgia Tech quarterback Eastman and end
IVIyers (81) fail to connect on a pass late in the third period as Ernie
Parker (33) and Dennis McAfee (38) defend (?); Opposite, above: Tailback
Jim Darnley (23) makes a great catch of a Duhon pass in front of
Georgia Tech's K. Brody as Tulane marches toward it's first touchdown
of the homecoming clash.
36
M favored Tulane team fell to Air Force in the Green Wave's
opening game of its "second season." Air Force was tlie first
to score on a 26 yard pass play. Neither team was then able
to score until the third quarter, when Chuck Loftin dove over
the goal line from the one yard line and Uwe Pontius kicked
the PAT. Later in the third quarter Pontius kicked a 19 yard
field goal which put the Wave ahead 10-7. Air Force then drove
down twice deep into Tulane territory and kicked field goals
on both occasions to put the game away 13-10. Even though
Tulane jumped out to an early lead, the Falcons, taking advantage
of the Greenies' vulnerable middle, piled up huge gains on the
ground and ran for a total of 217 yards. Bobby Hudon and Jim
Yarter on offense and Scott Haber and Ernie Parker on defense
again played fine ball, but the teams could not make the big
play to save the win.
Fired up for homecoming, the Green Wave downed the
Yellow Jackets of Georgia Tech, 23-12. The Wave scored all of
its points in the first half and then withstood a strong second
half attack by Tech. Tulane's first T.O., which climaxed a 74
yard drive, came on an 18 yard pass from Bobby Duhon to
Turk Evans. Uwe Pontius added the extra point and Tulane was
ahead 7-0. The Green Wave then got a break when Tech hobbled
a punt with the Wave recovering. The scoring combo of Duhon
and Evans then put Tulane on the board again. Uwe Pontius
missed the conversion, but kicked a 34 yard field goal moments
later to make the score 16-0. The Greenies' final score came
on a four yard sweep by Chuck Loftin and Pontius' PAT. The
Engineers rallied in the second half, but the Wave held on
and chalked up their second victory of the season, 23-12.
37
VARSITY FOOTBALL
VANDERBILT AND TENNESSEE
FTER an impressive victory over Georgia Tecti, Tulane con-tinued
its winning way by swamping the Vanderbilt Commo-dores
27-14, in a game higlilighted by a strong offensive show.
The Green Wave's first score was on a one yard plunge by Warren
Bankston. Pontius converted and Tulane was out in front 7-0.
A Tulane drive later in the first half bogged down and Pontius
was called on to try a field goal. He succeeded and the Green
Wave then led 10-0. After a Vandy punt, the Wave marched
63 yards on a scoring drive capped by a one yard plunge by
Bankston, his second of the night. Later in the first half Dennis
IVlcAfee intercepted a Vandy pass, and one play later Jim Darn-ley
scampered 35 yards to pay dirt and Tulane left the field
at the half leading 24-7. In the third quarter, Tulane could not
mount a sustained offensive drive, but five plays into the fourth
period Pontius kicked a 38 yard field goal to put the score
at 27-7. Vandy mounted a drive later and scored but it was
too little too late and Tulane came away the victor, 27-14.
After the hard fought victory over Vanderbilt, the Green
Wave found itself face to face with the State of Tennessee's
other contribution to the S.E.C., the Volunteers of U.T. Both
teams played well, and even though the Tulane Gladiators came
upon the losing end, 35-14, they certainly did not lose any
face. By the time the scoreboard clock ran out, our Greenies
had racked up an impressive 285 yards total offense. With
1:07 remaining in the first half. Quarterback £obby Duhon hit
Nick Pizzolatto from the 19 yard line making the score 28-7
at the half. After a brilliant goal line stand in the second half,
the Wave took over on the Volunteer five. Wayne Francingues
and Warren Bankston moved the ball to the Vol's 40, where
Duhon took over the controls. He drove the ball over himself
and Uwe Pontius added the PAT. Tulane fought brilliantly through-out
the rest of the game, but was never able to overcome the
staunch Volunteer defense.
38
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Opposite, left above: Fullback Warren Bankston (19) takes a Duhon swing
pass for eight yards In the second quarter as Vandy's Chip Healy (43)
moves in for the tackle; Opposite, right above: Vandy's A J Trivers
hits the dirt as Darnley (23) does a headstand with the ball and Jimmy
Yarter (40) prepares to do a double somersault to complete the act;
Opposite, below: Duhon misses a pass in the second quarter, but Nick
Pizzolatto comes back to make the tackle on defensive back El Arnovitz;
Left above: Defensive standout Scott Haber (81) stacks up Tennessee's
Walter Chadwick to stop a Vol drive in the third period; Right above:
Tim Coughlin (35) races up the middle for 7 yards before being dragged
down by UNC's Bruce Sternberg and Norwood as Wafer helps out; Below:
Linebacker Dennis McAfee (38) stops Fullback Richard Pickens as Haber
closes in during fourth period action.
39
VARSITY FOOTBALL
VIRGINIA AND LSU
|n the last home outing of the year, the Green Wave took
a 10-0 halftime lead, then proceeded to give the Virginia Cav-aliers
the second half and the game, 14-10.
Once again, Tulane opened the game with a score as the
Wave marched down to the Virginia 24 yard line before they
were halted and Uwe Pontius came in to kick a 31 yard field
goal to put Tulane on top, 3-0. After an exchange of punts,
the Wave put on a brilliant offensive march and went 77 yards
for the touchdown, with Chuck Lifton going over from the two
yard line, to run the halftime score to 10-0.
In the second half, the Greenies were unable to contain
the running of Virginia tailback Frank Quayle, who gained 72
yards in the game, falling three short of Tulane fullback War-ren
Bankston's game high of 75 yards, and also gave up three
fumbles to the Cavaliers. With their final touchdown coming
near the end of the final period, Virginia was fortunate to take
a 14-10 victory back to Charlottesville.
In the finale of the year, football fans were treated to one
of the most exciting games ever in Louisiana. 62,500 fans at
Tiger Stadium expecting an LS.U. rout ended up on the edge
of their seats until the final gun sounded. In the first half
LS.U. built up a 28-7 lead, capitalizing on three Tulane fumbles.
Tulane's only score came on a Warren Bankston run. The second
half, however, was a different story. The Wave first drove 78
yards to score. Three plays later the Greenies recovered a Tiger
fumble and Wayne Francingues, working from the shotgun, lobbed
a scoring pass to Nick Pizzolatto from the three. Pontius con-verted
and the score was 28-21, LS.U. The Tigers then scored
again. After Tulane lost the ball on downs, Schott IVIumme
recovered an LS.U. fumble at the Tiger seven and Duhon hit
Tom Wright for a T.O. on fourth down. Score, 34-27. LS.U.
went on to score again in the last minute, but only then was
the game decided. The Wave played its best football in the
last thirty minutes of the season, ending a disappointing fall
on an encouraging note.
40
Opposite, top: Loftin gets smothered by the middle of the Virginia line
as he goes for two yards in the first period: Opposite, middle: Loftin
stands all alone this time as he takes a second quarter Duhon pitchout;
Opposite, below: Fullback Tim Coughlin (35) takes a first period Duhon
handoff for four yards during first quarter action against L.S.U.; Top
left: Bankston (195 gains eight yards on a pitchout following a beautiful
block by tackle Dean Smith (76); Top right: Haber (81) and tackle Schott
Mumme force Nelson Stokely to hurry his pass in the second period;
Above: The second half comeback is started as shotgun quarterback
Francingues swings around right end for seven yards; Left, below: Duhon
fakes a handoff to Coughlin before following him around right end for
three yards in the first quarter; Left, below: Pizzolatto grabs a down-and-
out pass from Duhon for 12 yards as the comeback continues against
L.S.U.
41
Above: Linebacker Dennis IVIcAfee (38) and guard Vic Eumont (63) stop
Tennessee's Walter Chadwick short of the goal line in the contest against
the Vols; Center: Weak end Nick Pizzolatto maks headway with a pass
during the victory over Vanderbilt as Turk Evans (84) looks for a block;
Left: Pizzolatto gets a Duhon pass batted away by the Cavalier defenders
in the loss to Virginia; Opposite, center: Wingback John Mueller gets
stacked up after receiving a pass in the fourth quarter of the Virginia
game; Opposite, helow: Quarterback Bobby Duhon rolls around the right
side looking for an opening in the first half against Virginia.
42
VARSITY SPORTS
FOOTBALL
43
44
VARSITY SPORTS
FOOTBALL
45
VARSITY SPORTS
CHEERLEADERS rpD|pIH
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Below: Head Coach Jim Pittman; Right: Dr. Paul Trickett, Team Pliysician; Lower
right: Head Trainer, Bubba Porche; Opposite, top left: Dr. Rix Yard and Harvey
Jessup, Assistant Athletic Director; Opposite, top right: Athletic Director, Dr. Rix
N. Yard; Opposite, lower left: Offensive End Coach, Joe Clark; Opposite, lower right:
Defensive Backfield Coach, Billy Tohill.
48
VARSITY SPORTS
FOOTBALL STAFF
49
VARSITY SPORTS
FOOTBALL
Varsity Football Team, First Row: Manager Leonard Simmons, Mason Webster,
Derald Smith, Dan Dembinski, Mil(e Cammarata, Paul Arnold, Jim Wallace, Tom
Barrows, Schott Mumme; Second Row: Head Coach Jim Pittman, Mike Tolle,
Warren Bankston, Uwe Pontius, Mike Fitzpatrick, Tim Coughlin, Jim Darnley,
Co-Captain Bobby Duhon, Co-Captain Jim Jancik, Dennis Drauss, Jim Wright,
Bob Dawson, Lou Campomenosi, Maurice Gartman, Coach Jack O'Leary; Third
Row: Coach Billy Tohill, Coach Frank Young, Tom Nosewicz, Mike Sontag,
Jim Spring, Bruce Guidry, Lloyd Pye, Steve Hartnett, Vic Eumont, Turk Evans,
Ernie Parker, Dennis McAfee, Steve Boyd, Coach Joe Blaylock, Coach Pat
Culpepper; Fourth Row: Coach Pap Morris, Scott Haber, Ricky Adams, Sid
Jones, Hugh Morton, Chuck Loftin, Howard Moore, John Snell, Nick Pizzolatto,
Jim Trahan, Wayne Francinques, Roger Green, Ken Tanana, Jim Yarter, Brad
Calhoun, Coach Jerry Colquette, Coach Joe Clark; Fifth Row: Mark Kirkland,
Larry Stone, Pat Jacobs, Larry Mickal, Dean Smith, Charles Browning, Bart
Bookatz, Duke Duffee, Mike Reed, Dick Redd; Sixth Row: Rick Stafford, Jon
Haines, Calvin Fox, Tom Wright, Bill Frey, John Anderson, John Muellar, John
Onofrio, Steve Shaw, Kent Jenkins.
50
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Freshman Football Team, First Row: Coach Jerry Colquette, Coach Don Capretz, Gordon Roy, Bryan
Duck, David Richard, Lowell Schexnayder, Ken Sanders, Joe Gendron, Rodney Bazar, Roger Schramm,
Head Freshman Coach Jack O'Leary; Second Row: IVIanager Dean Taylor, Ricky Kingrea, Jack LaBorde,
Ray Hester, Duke Chappius, John Autenreith, Francis Daigle, Tom Caucio, Sam Scelfo, Randy Albers;
Third Row: Mack Michael, Carl Tatum, Bruce Jackson, Harold Sisk, Steve Spomer, Mike Walker, Chip
DeWitt, Lonnie Sibley; Fourth Row: John Charles, Earl Robinson, Brian Robinson, Jack Bedwell, Paul
Shirley, Jim Shepard, Steve Stark, Mike Farnell, Gerald Boudreaux; Fifth Row: Bob Hendon, Don
Fortier, Albert Low, Johnny, Gill, Jimmy White, Butch Spencer, Jim Koontz.
51
Right: Terry Habig (43) driving against Rich Hickman (24) of L.S.U. at
Baton Rouge; Bottom: A capacity crowd of over 5,000 fills Tulane Gym as
Pistol Pete Maravich leads L.S.U. against the Wave in January; Opposite,
top: Johnny Arthurs (31) and Dennis Riddle (35) sweep the boards at Baton
Rouge in the second L.S.U. game; Opposite, bottom: Bob Spurck (45) gets
a pass off to Joel Miller (23) over L.S.U.'s Rich Lupcho at Baton Rouge.
52
Continuing their strong finish from last season, Coach
Ralph Pedersen's Green Wave opened the season with an easy
victory over Southwestern at Memphis by a score of 95-72. Cap-tain
Dan Moeser led both teams with 16 points, followed by
Johnny Arthurs with 13. Three days later, the Wave cagers
extended their winning streak, including the last five games
of the 1966-67 season, to seven by defeating Florida Southern,
104-72.
The Tulane hoopsters ran into trouble on the first road
trip of the year, foreshadowing their season-long frustration
on the road, losing to Baylor and Rice. Erratic floor play and
poor shooting hampered the Wave effort In the Baylor contest,
which they lost 93-82. Moeser was high scorer for Tulane for
the third consecutive game. The Wave again couldn't roll against
Rice, and lost to the Owls 88-81. Arthurs led the Tulane scoring
with 19 points, followed by Moeser and Bob Spurck, with 16
apiece. The following Saturday, at home again, the Greenies lost
to Purdue and their highly-touted sophomore. Rick Mount, 107-92.
Two days later, Tulane broke its three-game losing streak
by nipping Denver, 85-83, In a game that was even closer than
the score indicates. Dan Moeser, coming out of a sick-bed, led
the Wave with 27 points. Next, the Wave won the opening game
of the Mobile Classic tournament, downing Spring Hill 90-86. In
the championship game, the Wave bowed to Alabama, 90-83.
Terry Habig was selected for the All-Tournament team.
Shortly after the Mobile Classic, Coach Pedersen suffered
a mild coronary spasm and was forced to relinquish his position
for the remainder of the season. The team effort was hampered
by Injuries to Fitzgerald and Spurck and It took five more games
for the Wave to play winning basketball again. Georgia Tech,
led by Phil Wagner's 36 points, started the slide by dropping
the Wave 100-81 In Atlanta. Tulane then played L.S.U. at home
before a standing-room only crowd, and the Tigers, led by the
magical ball-handling and 52 point scoring output of super-sopho-more
Pete Maravlch, broke open a tight game In the last minutes
and defeated the Greenies 100-91.
VARSITY SPORTS
BASKETBALL
53
VARSITY SPORTS
BASKETBALL
VN THE road again, the Wave was upset twice: first by Kent
State, 93-73, and then by Pittsburgh, 75-73. Poor floor play hurt
the Greenies in both games and the effort was cramped by
some highly questionable refereeing. Continuing the loss streak,
the cagers dropped a 98-81 battle to Missouri.
The next night, however, the Wave put all the pieces to-gether
and upset the taller, heavier Miami Hurricanes, 99-88.
Twenty points by Johnny Arthurs and spirited hustle by reserve
guard Drew Madar sparked the Tulane victory. The Greenie hoop-stes
dropped another road tilt, this one by an 83-76 count to
Louisiana College in Pineville, and then racked up a season-high
109-81 victory over the Air Force Academy. Arthurs' 31 points
led the way in the Tulane victory. The Wave next traveled to
New York to play N.Y.U. and in the first college double header
ever played in the new Madison Square Garden, the Greenies
whipped the Violets 71-60. Tulane only hit on 36% of its shots
but they held star Violet guard Jim Miller to 10 points to pave
the way to victory. The Greenies next stretched the win streak
to three by defeating Chicago, 89-53. Terry Habig paced the
attack with 21 points.
The cagers then traveled to Baton Rouge, where Pistol
Pete Maravich, the nation's leading scorer, and some poor
refereeing were again too much to handle. Maravich this time
scored 55 points and the final score was 99-92, L.S.U. The Wave
met Davidson next and played one of their best games of the
year, although in a losing cause, bowing to the Southern Con-ference
Champions, 76-68., The cagers bounced back against
Stetson, dropping the Hatters, 80-66. This was the Wave's final
away game of the season, and only their third win on the road,
compared to nine losses.
The Greenie cage team went into the last two games of
the year needing victories over Virginia Tech and Georgia Tech
for a 12-12 season, and in two exciting contests, accomplished
just that. In the rematch against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets,
Tulane scored 11 straight points in the final two minutes of
play to win going away, 88-77. Arthurs with 21, Billy Fitzgerald
with 20, and Terry Habig and Drew Madar with 13 apiece pro-vided
the offensive thrust. In the season's finale, Johnny Arthurs'
25 points led the Wave to a comeback 88-78 victory over Vir-ginia
Tech. Arthurs finished the season with a 19.4 scoring
average, the fifth highest in Tulane history.
: =K^ v- C^~ ^-^ii^^^^
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54
Top: Madar (5), Moeser (24), and Miller (23); Above: Tom Nissaike, who assumed head
coach duties in mid-season after illness sidelined Ralph Pedersen; Left: Freshman
guard Mike Billingsley (21); Opposite, left: Terry Habig (43), Wave guard surrounded in
the L.S.U. game by Tiger Randy Lamont and Tulane center Dennis Riddle; Opposite,
below: Freshman Tim Hummel (33) driving In for a layup against the Baby Bengals.
55
VARSITY SPORTS
BASKETBALL
56
Opposite: Varsity Basketball Team; first row: Terry Habig, Joel Miller, Bob Spurck,
Drew Madar, Ned Reese; middle row: Assistant Coach Tom Nissaike, Bill Fitzgerald,
Al Kralovansky, Rick Carlson, Johnny Arthurs, Head Coach Ralph Pedersen; back row:
IVlanager Steve Sullivan, Dan Moeser, Don Simmons, Greg Robers, Dennis Riddle, Mitch
Urbanski. Above: Freshman squad: Rusty Palmer, Tim Hummel, Stan KwiatowskI,
George Ferguson, Warren Aldridge, John Sutter, Stan Innes, Harold Sylvester, Mike
Billingsley, Mike Henry, Manager Robert Garland.
57
#A-I
ULANE teams seem to have a knack for getting themselves
overrated, and it was this factor that disappointed a great many
fans of the baseball team last year. None, to be sure, were
more disppointed than first year coach Milt Retif, who had to
face the problem of keeping up the strong baseball tradition
that Tulane has had. The year before he arrived, Tulane was
at a high, with a 17-7 season and several SRO crowds. In 1967,
the team finished with eight wins and 12 losses. Excuses of-fered
were an inconsistency of hitting (.220), teamwork, and
pitching (ERA 5.40). There is not too much left.
The attitude of both coach and players for the 1968 season
is highly optimistic, and it seems that the team has settled
down with the thought of playing some good ball. On the prac-tice
field, a bit of clowning adds to the high spirit, work and
love for the game that might make this year a winning one.
Strong hitting from Ronnie Scott (3b), Billy Fitzgerald (c), Wayne
Francingues (ss) and Steve Martin (cf) should help the team
score, and field play by Johnny Dalton (2b), Johnny Arthurs (lb),
Toby Walcott (rf), John Shay (If) and Ned Reese will highlight
a strong defense. The major problem not only for Tulane but
most other teams is the pitching staff. The top Tulane pitcher
is Don Simpson, and he is backed by Dave Andignac, Bobby
Thomas and Steve Walton. Coach Retlif says the team's success
rides on how these men come through, and, as of now, it is
hard to say. Outstanding freshmen are infielders Marty Donovan
and pitchers Steve Walton and Bobby Thomas.
The schedule that Tulane plays is comparable to any major
school. Such opponents as NCAA champion Illinois State. World
Series Champ Auburn, Kansas State and Spring Hill should more
than prove the team's ability. The highpoint of the season is
usually the games against ever-present rival LSU.
The future for baseball seems to be on an upswing as
compared with the past season. Coach Retif is satisfied with
the new school support which includes a rise in budget and
improvement of the practice field. Another bright spot is the
increased scouting programs that the staff has been able to
carry out. They are making contacts with high school players
earlier in their careers to insure sufficient talent for future
teams. With the first season of night games at home, at-tendance
should equal that of three years ago. The problems
that the program faces lie mostly in a lack of student promo-tion.
The crowds that the team did draw last year were rowdy
and disrespectful of the player's abilities. Coach Retif feels
that support is helpful to the team's already high morale, and
that, with help, this season should prove exciting and well worth
watching.
58
VARSITY SPORTS
BASEBALL
Below: Varsity Baseball Team; front row: Leo Fox, Ward Purdum, Jerry
Mercier, Ronnie Scott, Wayne Francinques, John Kirchner, Jim Barton,
David Andignac; middle row: Marty Donovan, Steve Martin, Ernie Demma,
John Dalton, Lee Martiny, Bobby Thomas, Steve Walton, Don Simpson,
Manager Peter Bock; back row: Coach Milt Retif, Chip Sanches, Bill Fitz-gerald,
Johnny Arthurs, Toby Walcott, George Ditta, Steve Kramer, Ned
Reese, John Shay.
59
VARSITY SPORTS
TRACK
Below: Tulane Track Team; Rob Kelly, John Dommerich, Pat Glynn, Barry
Wax, Gary Groff, Stormy Boudreaux, Earl Levith, Erwin Mendelkern, Richard
Rogers, Mark Morley, Joe Brown, Gene Tomlin, Scott Sanders, Coach John
Oelkers, Bobby Manard, Bob Brown, Richard Baumann, Paul McGee, Malcolm
Meyer.
60
I N THE 1967 track season the thinclads of Tulane broke four
school marks and established numerous meet and relay records.
Led by Gary Groff, Lionel Boudreaux, Paul Arsuaga, Dick
Rogers, Barry Wax, Bob Brown and Malcolm Meyer, the team
faired well throughout the season.
In the first meet of the year, the annual "W" Club indoor
meet, John Oelkers' cindermen took two first places; in the
two-mile relay, the team of Meyer, Rogers, Brown and Arsuaga
took first and Groff set a new meet record in the broad jump
with a leap of 24 feet, UVa inches.
Although the Wave finished sixth overall in the University
of Houston meet, they took three second places and made a
good showing. Lack of depth in many events prevented their
placing higher.
The next week the thinclads played host at the annual
Tulane Invitational meet. On their home track they picked up
four first places; Arsuaga in the mile, David Barr in the two-mile
event, Barry Wax in the discus, and Groff in the long jump.
In the Southwestern Relays which followed this meet, the two-mile
relay team of Arsuaga, Brown, Meyer, and Rogers racked
up a first place.
The final meet of the year saw Tulane facing L.S.U., Mis-sissippi
State and U.S.L., three traditionally strong track teams.
The Wave took a first in only one event, but placed in many
others.
61
VARSITY SPORTS
TENNIS
Right: Freshman Johnny Williams playing a ladder match to determine his
position in the rough matches of the spring season. Below: Coach Emmet
Pare, Gordy Weil, Gordon Traylor, Mike Anderson, Turner Howard, Pierce
Kelley, Johnny Williams, Bill Dubin. Opposite, top left: Junior ace Turner
Howard looks forward to many victories and possibly a major championship
before playing on the summer circuit. Opposite, top right: Veteran Pierce
Kelley warms up for his important role as Coach Pare's number two man.
Opposite, below: Coach Pare gives improving Bill Dubin advice? consola-tion?
aggravation?
62
HLTHOUGH the tennis team takes second stage to the major
sports on campus, it is able to boast a better record than any
of them. Tulane is traditionally on the top in NCAA competi-tion
despite the limited number of scholarships that the school
permits. Coach Emmet Pare still complains that he is hampered
by the fact that he can only offer about one and one-half scholar-ships
each year, but this problem does not seem to affect the
team's success. Last year, the team completed the season un-defeated,
and has lost only two of the starters from that six,
Lee Kantrow and Richard Carter.
The coach's perennial skepticism appears again this year,
but, as usual, it is largely unwarranted. With Turner Howard,
the number one man on last year's squad, returning, this season
should be as good as many before it, including several SEC
and NCAA championships. Ranked number one and two on the
1968 outfit are Howard and Gordon Traylor; backing them up
are veterans Pierce Kelley^ Mike Anderson and Bill Dubin.
The team opens its season with Big Ten champ Michigan
State. Also on the schedule are Rice, the top rated team in the
nation, Texas, Oklahoma and Georgia Tech. They plan to attend
the first Tennessee Invitational Tournament held in the new
coliseum in Knoxville along with Florida State, Tennessee and
Southern Illinois, all of which have large tennis programs.
A player who is granted a scholarship on the Tulane team
must have already proved his ability in high school and age-group
competition. The time he spends under Coach Pare deals
with perfecting every aspect of his game. There is very little
chance for someone to make the team by trying out, and most
of the players on the squad are recruited from the top rank in
their states.
63
64
U NDER Coach Innes Millar and Ralph Pedersen, the prospects
for this year's golf team are no better than the 1967 edition
which finished the year with an ignominious 1-9 record. The
main hope lies with the three returning lettermen, Jim iVlarl^el,
IVlac Miller and Frank Wells. Backing them up will be Junior
Joel Miller, sophomores Andy Milberg, Steve Sullivan and Jim
Lum, and freshman Maury Picheloup.
Coach Millar has high hopes for a winning season this year
after tying the University of South Alabama at Tuscaloosa and
whipping Spring Hill of Mobile. But the remainder of the schedule
calls for outstanding play as upcoming matches include such
teams as 1967 N.C.A.A. Champion Houston, Southern Illinois,
Minnesota, L.S.U., Northern Illinois, Illinois State and Southern
Mississippi. And finally, there is the LS.U. invitational at Baton
Rouge where last year Tulane finished 17th out of 19 teams.
So it seems that this is once again a building year for
the golf team as Coach Millar waits for the six younger
players to develop while the three older boys try to keep the
Green Wave on the edge of respectability.
VARSITY SPORTS
GOLF
Below: Tulane Golf Team; Frank Wells, Jim Markel, Steve Sullivan, Mac Miller, Coach
Innes Millar, Andy Milberg, and Maury Picheloup. Missing: Coach Ralph Pedersen,
Joel Miller.
65
VARSITY SPORTS
SWIMMING
Below: Tulane Varsity Swim Team; Charlie Carson, manager; Pete Levine, Charlie
Johnson, John Rouquette, Bruce McKeever, David Bercuson, Bob Bresnahan, Doug
Williams, Coach Paul Clifford. Seated: left, Mike Goldstein, winner of the Lowell
Damont Award; right, Don Kearns, Captain and Most Valuable Swimmer.
I HE Tulane Swim Team finished with an unimpressive 3-9
record for the 1968 season, but this most definitely does not
reflect their true power. Rookie coach Paul Clifford was able
to push these tankers to two ego-boosting victories over arch
rival L.S.U.
This apparent lack of depth was hardly noticed in the record
books, though, as three new names were written into posterity.
Don Kearns is the new 200 yard champ, while John Rouquette
broke the old 200 yard backstroke record. Bob Bresnahan
reached his peak in the grueling 1,000 yard freestyle.
The 1969 edition of the team should prove to be a little
stronger as there were only three graduating seniors on the
entire team: co-captains Mike "Tunafish" Goldstein and Don
Kearns, and Dave Bercusson. Co-captains Goldstein and Kearns
ended the season in a blaze of glory as they both took three
first places in the last meet. Returning letterman for 1969 in-clude
record holder Bob Bresnahan and John Rouquette, and
also Charlie Johnson, Buck McKever, Doug Williams, Frank Lom-bardo,
and Pete Levine.
The Greenies were particularly proud of their two wins
over the L.S.U. Tigers. The scores were an impressive 85-13
and 68-23. The team won its third and final victory at the ex-pense
of the University of the South.
A contributing factor in the team's nine meet losses was
that six of their opponents were ranked among the top twenty
tank teams in the nation, an honor not shared by the Greenies.
"ffTI
66
67
FOOTBALL
Won 3, Lost
TU
3 Miami of Ohio
36 North Carolina
14 Miami of Florida
Florida
10 Air Force
23 Georgia Tech
27 Vanderbilt
14 Tennessee
10 Virginia
27 LS.U.
14
11
34
35
13
12
14
35
14
41
BASKETBALL
Won 12, Lost 12
TU
95 Southwestern 72
104 Florida Southern 72
82 Baylor 93
81 Rice 88
92 Purdue 107
85 Denver 83
97 Dartmouth 76
90 Spring Hill 86
83 Alabama 90
81 Georgia Tech 100
91 LS.U. 100
73 Kent State 93
73 Pittsburgh 75
81 Missouri 98
99 Miami of Florida 88
76 Louisiana College 83
109 Air Force 81
71 N.Y.U. 60
89 Chicago 53
92 LS.U. 99
68 Davidson 76
80 Stetson 66
88 Georgia Tech 77
88 Virginia Tech 78
BASEBALL
Won 8, Lost 12
(1967 Season
TU
1 Southern Illinois 3
5 Southern Illinois 9
8 Northern Illinois 2
6 Northern Illinois 5
7 Florida 8
1 Florida 4
6 Florida State 10
1 Florida State 5
9 MacMurray 6
2 Missouri 1
1 Missouri 5
10 Missouri 3
5 St. Bernard 4
6 St. Bernard 8
S. E. Louisiana 1
5 Florida State 8
5 Florida State 7
8 LS.U.
LS.U. 9
12 S. E. Louisiana 7
68
SWIMMING
Won 3, Lost 9
TU
55 Evansville 58
39 East Carolina 74
40 Cincinnati 73
21 S.M.U. 90
54 Georgia Tech 59
37 South Florida 76
49 Florida 63
51 Florida State 60
81 L.S.U. 14
78 Sewanee 33
45 Alabama 71
71 L.S.U. 23
TENNIS
Won 8, Lost
(1967 Season)
TU
7 Tennessee 2
6 Rice
8 Illinois 1
5 Mississippi State 3
8 N.O. Lawn Tennis Club 1
6 Texas
6 Georgia Tech 3
8 L.S.U. 1
1968 Schedule
Michigan State March 20
Oklahoma March 26
Texas April 4
Rice April 5
Arkansas April
Georgia Tech April 20
L.S.U. April 27
Tennessee Tournament May 3
TRACK
1968 Schedule
Tulane Invitational March 9
N.C.A.A. Indoor Meet March 15
McNeese State Invitational March 23
Florida Relays March 30
Texas Relays April 5
Southwestern Relays April 13
Northwestern Relays April 20
Civitan Relays
Mobile Chamber of Commerce Meet
Penn Relays April 26
LS.U. and Mississippi State May 11
GOLF
Won 1, Lost 9
(1967 Season)
TU
7 Nicholas State 11
141/2 Western Illinois 121/2
111/2 Southern Illinois 151/2
71/2 South Alabama 101/2
8 Auburn 10
5 Southern Mississippi 22
8 Southern Mississippi 19
13 Nicholas State 14
11 LS.U. 16
31/2 LS.U. 231/2
69
VARSITY SPORTS
SCORES
HUGBY was brought to the Tulane campus in the spring of
1967 by a tiandfu! of medical students who had played the
sport during their undergraduate days at eastern universities.
With the help of a former South African rugby player, the team
picked up several more players and experience. After a few
weeks of practice to allow the team to become acquainted,
the group played a team from the Houston area. They lost this
initial encounter but came back this year to win three in a
row and participate in the First Annual Rugby Tournament in
Hammond, Louisiana, during Mardi Gras.
Rugby is a brutal sport, but it is equally rewarding. After
each practice and each game, the team meets at Eddie Price's
to drink beer and discuss future opponents. The beer busts
seem to draw most of the Tulane players.
This past season was a highly successful one for Coach
Ernesto Bonilla's soccer team as they compiled a 6-3-1 record.
The team was strong offensively, being led by Captain Fred King,
co-captain Ali Sahli, Paul Sills, and Steve Ackerman. As strong
as the offense was, the defense matched them with King drop-ping
back from his halfback position, Santiago Vilela, and goalies
Randy Miller and Chris Green.
This season the team counted victories over LSUNO (twice),
Keesler Air Force Base, Delgado Institute, Elgin Air Base, and
the HMSC Bonaventure (which thus gained the distinction of
being the only ship to lose to Tulane in both soccer and rugby).
The defeats came at the hand of Keesler, Mississippi Southern,
and LSD. Following the regular season, the team will continue
playing by scheduling exhibitions with incoming French, British
and Canadian ships.
General supervision of the intramural sports calendar is the
function of the Intramural Athletic Council with coach Ben Abadie
serving as advisor.
.-*-Wi^*iW'i *>. 1* ^s*--;j-
RUGBY SCORES
Southeast Louisiana
Southeast Louisiana
Southeast Louisiana
Kansas City Blackhawks
Washington, D.C.
H.M.C.S. Bonaventure
TU
— 8
0-11
6-9
3-0
8-6
3 - 5
70
INTRAMURAL SPORTS
71
Beauties
73
Miss Pauline Tulane
J Laurie Fuge
74
75
MAID OF HONOR Ann Mcllhenny
4
76
Barbara Edm
77
Annette Grossman
78
Jane Mundt
79
Marilyn Thomas
so
Nancy Wendel
81
82
HOMECOMING QUEEN
MISS GAY YELLEN
83
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45
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84
BEAUTY
HOMECOMING COURT
Clockwise, opposite, left: Miss Pam Breen; Miss Emily Clark; Miss Jean
Cooper, Maid of Honor; Miss Kitty Clark; Miss Meg Burns; Miss Sue Todd.
86
I HIS year demanded more leadership ability from all areas
of the university than any other in the history of Tulane. Dr.
Longenecker was outstanding for his patience, apparent under-standing,
and smooth, albiet general statements at a time of
student-administration confrontation. The leadership of the stu-dent
body was probably most conspicuous for the peculiar way
in which it dealt with uncomfortable circumstances. The stand-ard
operating procedure, as it eventually evolved, was to resign.
This strange phenomenon was not limited to the student body,
however. It was in fact initiated by none other than that "dis-tinguished
publisher and noted author," Nodding Carter. In the
flurry of resignations that followed Mr. Carter's unprecedented
action, precipitated by the publication of allegedly obscene pas-sages
in the student paper, it is hard to determine who was the
first student to actually resign his position. Most sources point
to Jeff Howie for this signal honor. But no matter, the trend
was set. It became sort of in to be out, a camp thing, and
everybody was doing it. Hank Harnage, erstwhile Messiah to
the student senate and prophet of student power, liberalized
liquor laws, and N.S.A., resigned perfunctorily after the failure
of the N.S.A. referendum in a manner vaguely reminiscent of
Socrates' gurgle of hemlock, if you will cast your minds back.
At this point, it seemed that the student body might be
spared further dramatics on the part of the proper politicians.
But lo! As the controversy over the publication of the now
famous Sophia photographs bubbled and churned, the acting
president of the senate, Larry Rosenblum, disappeared. With
Andy Schwartz (the next in line of succession) claiming to be
able to hold out no longer than six hours in this demanding
position, the entire student body waited in horror with images
of "Jane Rush—President" running through bewildered minds,
minds now steeled to accept even Snoopy or Dorothy Ricutti
as legitimate successors. But Larry came back.
LSfldBrShip ^^^ ^^^ subject of much debate during
the controversy. In^he end, the week of demonstrations which
accompanied serious discussions about the position of the stu-dent
body vis-a-vis the administration and the appropriate place
for "censorship" on the campus brought to fore some of the
best qualities of our legitimate representatives, notably Larry
Rosenblum and his conduct at the mass meeting Friday of that
week.
At times during the week, however, "leadership" took on
quite a different meaning. It became apparent that the term
was being defined roughly as "that quality attributed to one
who yells loudest and most persistently, while advocating start-ling
and inventive proposals with which to occupy the otherwise
idle minds of the uninterested listeners and lookers-on." Notable
were Jim Porter and Elliot Levin. The image of Porter leading
cheers down McAlister Drive makes it difficult to believe that
the people following were actually mature, discriminating Tulane
students. One almost expected a procession of floats and barges
to follow with flaming coconuts and plastic beads being tossed
about with reckless abandon. In the heat of the Tuesday night
sit-in in the U.C., Levin went so far as to say that his four
years at Tulane had been of no value to him whatsoever, a
statement which was taken by his audience to be painfully
obvious.
The carnival atmosphere did not obscure the fact that Tulane
students were actively concerned about an issue of general inter-est
to the student body, and this was far more important than
the specific questions of the photographs.
87
Above: Tulane Board of Administrators: Seated, Mr. Jacob Landry, IVIr.
Josepli McClosliey, Mrs. George M. Spellings, Chairman Darwin S. Fenner,
Mr. Clifford Favrot, Mr. Lester J. Lautenschlaeger, .Mr. Gerald Andrus.
Standing, Mr. Harry B. Kelleher, Mr. A. L. Jung, Jr., Mr. Richard W.
Freeman, Mr. Sam Israel, Jr., Mr. Edgar B. Stern, Jr., Mr. Charles Smither,
Mr. Leon Irwin, Jr., Mr. A. Percy Generes. Opposite, Dr. Herbert E.
Longenecker, President. Right, Dr. Clarence Scheps, Executive Vice Presi-dent.
88
UnCE more the Jambalaya presents a rich panorama of a
college year. In the decades to come this book will help you
to live again your college experience and feel the glow of old
friendships.
As a record of the year 1967-68 the Jambalaya is a his-torical
document. It depicts people and scenes as they were
during a certain period in time. Yet history tells not merely
what happened in the past but what has shaped the future.
In 1988 or 1998 or long thereafter you may look on these pages
and recall how your years at Tulane influenced the direction
of your life.
Events of the year have influenced Tulane's future also.
Visible evidences include the completion of the new general
library and the start on construction of a science building,
which will help the University serve many student generations.
Just as important in its potential is a comprehensive selfstudy
that has involved the whole institution, including a student
committee that has contributed valuable observations. From
this study, and other extensive planning activities of the past
year, will come developments that will prepare your University
to meet new and greater challenges.
When you revisit your University—and I hope you will do
so often—you will find some familiar scenes and some that
are new. But the new should never be strange, for adaptation
and growth are normal and necessary. And years from now
when you are identified as a Tulane alumnus your associates
will think of Tulane as it is then, not as it was when you
were here. Keep this book, then, not to induce nostalgia but
to remind you that you and your University are linked through
a hopeful and productive future.
Herbert E. Longenecker
)ERSH!P
BOARD OF ADMINISTRATORS
89
Top left: Robert A. Scruton, Security; left: Donald R. Moore, Housing;
above: Dorothy J. Dale, Newcomb Admissions; Agatha L. Newitt, Cultural
Activities; Edillia S. Kolb, International Office. Opposite, top right: Beatrice
M. Field, Alumni Activities; lower right: Jesse B. Morgan, Business Man-ager;
top left: Mildred B. Barkley, Reservations; lower left: Edward A.
Rogge, Admissions.
90
91
Above: John H. Stibbs, Dean of Students; Right: Dorothy N. Ricciuti, Adviser to
Women; Left: Tom McCay Jr., Associate Dean of Students. Opposite, above left:
Karlem Riess, Adviser to' Fraternities; Right: Einar Pedersen, Director, University
Center; Left: Endicott Batchelder, Director of Student Records.
92
93
LEADERSHIP
STUDENT LIFE
94
Opposite, above: Georgia White and Lynn Sport, Dean of Students Office;
Opposite, lower left: Sliaron Marcum, Budget Secretary; Lower right: Boo
Mason, Adviser to Atliletic Clubs. Below: IVIargaret Noble and Ellen Conlin,
Student Activities Office; Right: Leiand Bennett, Assistant Director, Uni-versity
Center; Below: Samuel McNeely, Jr., Director, International Office.
.=4.
95
LEADERSHIP
STUDENT SENATE
.f^r
wTUDENT government at Tulane has traditionally, and perennially,
been a matter of "much talk, little do": every year candidates have
promised to make student government a meaningful, effective instru-ment
for articulating and implementing students' opinions about the
life of the university, and every year they have either forgotten or
failed to make it such. This year was, to some degree, an exception,
for the results of the 1967-68 Student Senate's work were less
meager than those of most of Tulane's previous student governments.
Of course, there has only been a Student Senate for a couple of
years; previously student "government" was in the hands of a much
smaller and presumably much less representative Student Council.
Key figure in the past year's Senate was President Hank Harnage,
who brought to his post probably greater experience in the workings
of Tulane's often mysterious political processes than any Student
Body President in recent years. Even so, he often found his plans
and proposals frustrated by the opposition or simple indifference
of either the student body, the administration, or the Senate itself.
Accordingly, after only two months in office, Harnage and all the
other members of .the Senate's Executive Cabinet announced they
would resign at the end of the first semester unless major progress
was made in revitalizing both the power and the spirit of the Senate.
Some minor progress was apparently made during the following
weeks, but the key issue finally turned out to be the results of
a student body referendum concerning whether or not Tulane should
join the National Student Association.
96
Opposite, above right: Hank Harnage, President of the Student Senate, resigned
after the failure of the N.S.A. referendum. Opposite, below left: Larry Rosenblum,
Vice-President for Finance, became President of the Student Senate after IVlr.
Harnage's resignation. Above, top: The Executive Cabinet, before resignation fever
decimated it, included (from left) Gary Barker, Chairman of CACTUS; Andy
Schwartz, Vice-President for Administration; Hank Harnage, President; Jane
Rush, Secretary; Larry Rosenblum, Vice-President for Finance; and Jeff Yudin,
President of the Tulane University Center Board. Above: A meeting of the Student
Senate, here showing some of the senators.
97
Tulane had been a member of the liberal and progressive na-tional
student group in 1965-66, but a referendum in the spring of
the latter year had ended the affiliation. Harnage had attended the
N.S.A. national convention during the summer of 1967, and it was
there that he acquired the inspiration to promote the "student power"
theme that became a rallying cry throughout the year. However,
despite the 1967 revelation that it had been receiving C.I.A. financing
for a decade, the N.S.A. positions on civil rights, international issues,
and the policy of issuing statements that often did not represent
the views of many N.S.A. members were seemingly too much for
the majority of Tulane voters to swallow, and the proposed re-affiliation
was defeated 970-615.
The night the referendum results were disclosed, Harnage an-nounced
his resignation as Student Body President. None of the
other Senate officers decided to follow his lead, however, and the
Vice-President for Finance Larry Rosenblum assumed, more or less,
Harnage's duties. But neither Rosenblum nor Vice-President for Ad-ministration
Andy Schwartz ever really caught Harnage's dream of
a meaningful student govenment, and neither of them was ever
willing to put into their jobs the time and devotion that Harnage had.
It was ironic, then, that the year's major manifestation of "stu-dent
power,"—a week of protest marches, mass meetings, picketing
and petitions over alleged censorship of the Hullabaloo—came after
Harnage's departure from office and thus was under Rosenblum's
titular leadership. But most observers agreed that it had been Har-nage's
presidency that had prepared the way for the totally unex-pected,
totally un-Tulanian phenomen.on of a near-revolt by students.
In fact, most students seemed as stunned that the long-decried
student "apathy" had been shattered as did the university's adminis-tration.
Whether the new-found student consciousness and concern
would continue, no one could foretell.
Otherwise, the Student Senate did manage to pass a few important
bills during the year, sometimes in conjunction with other units
of that nebulous creature, "student government," such as men's
and girls' residence associations. And throughout the year the Senate
leaders found unexpected support for many of their plans and goals
from the faculty-student University Senate Committee on Student
Affairs, and especially from its chairman, Professor Stephen Zeff of
the Graduate School of Business Administration. (Another develop-ment
of the year was the addition of students to several more com-mittees
of the University Senate on which they had previously not
been represented—a possible harbinger of things to come.)
Among the actions which the Senate took during the year were
recognition of the Students for a Democratic Society as an official
student organization, despite fears that the radical group might dis-rupt
the university's normal processes and damage its "good name",
calls for boycotts of various local restaurants alleged to be dis-criminating
against Negro students; passage of a "student judiciary"
plan, still unapproved by the faculty and administration at the year's
end, to increase students' power in conduct and disciplinary cases;
approval of a student referendum making purchase of a copy of the
Jambalaya mandatory for all undergraduates; endorsement of a plan
to significantly expand the women's visiting hours in the men's
dormitories; and approval of a proposal to allow students to keep
liquor in their rooms.
In short, it was more a productive year than most in the past,
certainly (with the March demonstrations) a more exciting and color-ful
year. Yet the complaints that student government did not really
represent its constituents continued, and this failure of most stu-dents
to take the Senate and other governmental organs seriously,
together with the failure of many senators and even Senate officers
to take their duties and responsibilities seriously, represented con-tinued
threats to the possibility of establishing an effective and
meaningful student government at Tulane.
98
Opposite, above: Hank Harnage hands
the gavel to new Student Senate
President Larry Rosenblum following
his resignation announcement. Above:
President Rosenblum conducts the
Student Senate meeting in the snack
bar of the University Center during
the week of demonstrations following
the Sophia photographs' controversy.
Left: Tulane University President Lon-genecker
addresses students in his
"State of the University" speech
which was held March 13, after "the
week" during which the student body
had requested that Dr. Longenecker
address them.
99
LEADERSHIP
NEWCOMB STUDENT GOVERNMENT
UURISDICTION over student affairs at Newcomb College is
theoretically vested in the Newcomb Student Government. How-ever,
in dealing with questions of specific concern to Newcomb,
the government's effectiveness is severely hampered by a lack
of interest on the part of the student and cooperation on the
part of the administration, according to .the president of the
Newcomb student body, Sylvia Dreyfus, "This year we emerged
as an appropriate reflection of Tulane's era of apathy. The stu-dent
government embarked on a special lecture series to appeal
to students via contemporary issues, but there was no response.
Neither poetry nor prejudice solved the problem, suggesting
that nothing can.
"The one ironic question that arose after a year of disinterest
was one of Newcomb's autonomy. During this time of serious
world problems, the student senate tackled programs of com-munity
action. But Newcomb's students continued to view a
narrow world, unable to comprehend the complexities of life,
and the higher aspirations of student leaders went once again
unrecognized. Certainly we could agree with the forecast that
'Someday there will be a war and no one will come.'
"
This type of frustration is not uncommon among those
dealing with the nebulous responsibility of "governing" a large
and diverse student body. Those who prefer to see the results
of their toil in specific accomplishments may turn to an organ-ization
such as the Newcomb Athletic Council. Representatives
to this body are selected from each area of the student com-munity
for the purpose of supervising athletic competition at
the college. Tournaments are conducted and awards presented
to those groups and individuals judged most outstanding during
the year.
100
Opposite, Above left: President of the Newcomb Stu-dent
Government, Sylvia Dreyfus. Opposite, below:
Executive Cabinet of the Newcomb Student Govern-ment,
Penny Chittim, corresponding secretary; Bunny
Cornell, Recording Secretary; Laurie Ives, Vice-Presi-dent;
Sylvia Dreyfus, President. Above: The Newcomb
Athletic Council, seated, Denise Sucarino, Treasurer;
Mary Clare McEnerny, President; Kathy McHugh, Sec-retary;
standing, C. Blum, C. Boudreaux, C. Woosley,
A. Boyleston, C. Robinson, C. Dyer, S. Waguespack,
D. Dane, B. Fouts, C. Mehlman, L. Gonzales, D. Gustaf-son.
Left: President of the Student Senate, Hank
Harnage, and Sylvia Dreyfus, representing the New-comb
Student Government, at a meeting of the Student
Senate of the Associated Student Body of Tulane.
H)1
LEADERSHIP
HONOR BOARDS
Above: Newcomb Honor Board, begin-ning
at bottom right, C. Dyer, D. Sir,
B. Gordon, iVI. Davis, L. Goldman, N.
Cohen, N. Allison, C. Goldberger, E.
Ross, F. Hays, M. Del Favero, C. Fergu-son,
E. Lewis. Not pictured: S. Dreyfus.
Left: Tulane Honor Board, front rov»:
J. Fisher, H. Koch, W. Alworth, R.
Lumsden; back row: J. Morrill, G.
Ferris, R. Towie, P. Cominos. Not Pic-tured:
R. Knill, G. Briggs, T. Mont-gomery,
J. Roppolo, J. Yudin, S.
Sanger, A. Schwartz, K. Williams.
Opposite, above left: Newcomb Inner
Council, front row: B. Branch, S.
Fleischer, middle row, M. Coleman, S.
Rosenthal, E. Clarke, J. Kemp, C. Dyer.
Back row, M. Del Favero, K. Midkiff,
Midkiff, R. Grossman, C. Goldberger.
Opposite, above right: Inner Council
officers, Sidney Fleischer, Secretary,
and Clem Goldberger, President. Op-posite,
below: Tulane Inter-House
Council, J. Florey, B. Goldring, H.
Keller, C. Johnson, T. Bivins, Presi-dent;
D. Bercuson, J. Wohler, F. Zeis-berg.
Not Pictured: I. Adams, M.
Ringel.
I HE Honor Boards of the Tulane College of Arts and Sciences
and Newcomb College are identical in purpose and in relation-ship
with their Dean, but are quite different in structure. Mem-bers
of the Newcomb Board are elected from the student body
while members of the Tulane Board are appointed by the Dean.
The Tulane board is composed of eight faculty members and
eight students, four of whom are regularly seated on the Board
and four alternates. Each Board hears cases concerning Honor
Code violations and makes their recommendations to the Dean
of their respective schools as to the guilt or innocence of the
charged and what penalty, if any, they feel is necessary.
The Dorm Councils of Newcomb and Tulane, too, are quite
similar although the Newcomb Inner Council appears to be more
administrative than its Tulane counterpart. Conspicuous progress
was made this year, particularly when one considers the tra-ditional
do-nothingness of the councils. A liberalization of rules
for senior women was successfully undertaken this year at New-comb,
the result being a system in which the seniors are al-lowed
to regulate their own hours. Also significant was the
extension of evening curfew for underclassmen, the extent of
which was dependent upon the student's classification.
The Tulane Inter-House council, the top level of men's resi-dence
hall government, was a mover this year also. The Inter-
House Council was the body which took the initial steps in the
successful campaign to gain liberalized dormitory liquor rules.
Another campaign being waged by the council is a proposal for
a radical change in the hours during which female guests are
allowed in men's dorm rooms and the dormitory lounges. This
legislation failed to pass the University Senate, but the door
was left open for consideration of a revised version for which
passage is virtually assured. The Board of Administrator's stand
on the matter when it gets to them, though, is a cause of
concern among supporters of the proposal.
A conclusion to be drawn from these developments is that
the administration and the students involved are trying to make
dormitories competitive with fraternity houses and apartments
as centers for social as well as academic activity. If they suc-ceed
in this, then we are likely to see quite a shakeup of
traditional living patterns, with greater centralization of student
activity on campus, as opposed to the present tendency toward
fractionalization. The university would then become more of a
place to be than a place to visit.
102
LEADERSHIP
DORM COUNCILS
103
LEADERSHIP
TUCP
HFTER years of reorganization, of trimming useless committees
and self-evaluation, the Tulane University Center Program came
up with their best year to date in 1967-68. Tiip quality of the
programs, their frequency, and the support by the students, at
least, points out that TUCP is headed in the right direction.
But that's always been true, so we may interpret the year as
a culmination of the due process of trial and error programming
of the past years and say that TUCP made fewer errors this
year.
The philosophy that produced so many successes this year
as opposed to the few good presentations of the past can be
summed up in one word: professionalism. Everything that was
presented was done with more thought and work than in past
years, with a conscientious effort to appeal to the particular
needs of this university.
Much of the credit for the overall success of the year goes
to the individual committees. This year the committees were
allowed a free hand in carrying out their programs by the Execu-tive
Committee and although the results attest to the effective-ness
of this method it did produce a considerable lack of
cohesiveness, which might not be altogether a bad thing.
Another change that has slowly been taking place in the
TUCP is that an ever widening variety of students are begin-ning
to take part. No longer are the committees so liberally
sprinkled with fraternity and sorority pledges, who are urged
by their peers to get involved in a campus activity, and primarily
the TUCP, which has served as a popular scapegoat. Not to
discredit the Greeks, though, for they have capably carried the
whole program for years, but by diluting the Greek's dominance
the programming can achieve more campus-wide appeal.
An aspect of the TUCP's programming that helped immeasur-ably
in strengthening the overall appeal was its newly discovered
eagerness to mix in controversy to achieve a good program.
Mark Lane, James Farmer, and Dick Gregory were the sparks
for more heated campus discussion than Tulane has seen in
some time. Also, TUCP gained control of the entertainment in
Der Rathskeller which resulted in many S.R.O. nights in the
campus beer hall. In view of the strength of the TUCP, Green-backers,
a spirit organization founded at Tulane in 1935, be-came
a trial member of the program. As an independent organ-ization
it was hard-pressed to compete with the TUCP for
members.
KM
Opposite, above left: Jeff Yudin, President of the University Center Board:
Opposite, below: Officers of the board, Mary Prosser, Secretary, Jan Alexander,
Vice-President-Administration, and Arnold Shelby, Vice-President-Public Relations;
Above: University Center Committee Chairmen; Beth Sampson, Spotlighters; Mike
Ellison, Lagniappes; Kathy Smith, Padohad; Pete Brinkman, Recreation; Ann Hall,
Hospitality; Ed Dubuisson, Lyceum; Sonny V^iegand, Greenbackers; Marilyn
Thomas, Fine Arts; not pictured; K. K. Singh, Cosmopolitan. Above: The Vice
President Administration and Vice-President-Public Relations Staffs; Mildred
Lehmann, VPA, Pat Prins, VPPR, Tamzon Feeney, VPPR, Neil Campbell, VPA,
Denise Sucarino, VPPR: not pictured; Meg Burns, VPA, Bob Sussman, VPPR,
Trisha Glatthaar, VPPR.
105
I HE Recreation committee provides tlie university with a va-riety
of recreational functions aimed at giving every student a
ciiance for participation. Ttie committee is in charge of all pro-gramming
in the the swimming and games areas of the uni-versity
center and uses the facilities for many of its activities.
Some of the year's events included the marathon swim
club, the bicycle beer drinking contest, the Sadie Hawkins day
hayride, the Christmas ski trip to Vail and Montreal, and tourna-ments
in pool, bowling, and ping-pong. Representatives were
selected from participants in the various programs to represent
Tulane at regional games.
Events of the second semester included happenings of such
earth-shaking importance as the pie eating contest, another
hayride, the European plane trip, and a day at the races. The
committee also sponsors the bridge and chess clubs.
Spotlighters serves the Tulane student by attracting top
quality entertainment to the campus. The committee itself han-dles
all the planning, publicity, ticket selling and back stage
operations for its programs. Spotlighters has expanded its opera-tions
this year to include a significant amount of programming
in Der Rathskeller. The activities of the first semester included
a concert by Glenn Yarborough and a program during Christmas
week featuring the Tulanians. Club Vague Verte, a style show,
and a Bridal show were the highlights of the second semester.
Tulane's Der Rathskeller became a stop on the Coffee House
Circuit and enjoyed Raun MacKinnon, Bruce Farwell, and the
Sounds Unlimited. Several exciting student groups made their
debuts this year in the University Center basement. Another
success for Spotlighters was the innovation of Silent Film Nights,
featuring old Charlie Chaplin, Laurel and Hardy, and W. C. Fields
flicks.
The Cosmopolitan committee is designed to promote better
understanding between American and International students. Ttie
committee sponsors a wide assortment of programs aimed at
attracting a large number of participants.
The two biggest programs of the fall semester were the
Fete Internationale and the Christmas Bazaar. An evening of
international entertainment and exotic food was offered to a
capacity audience at the Fete. Gifts from all over the world
attracted many curious persons to the bazaar. Other first semes-ter
programs included two International picnics and India Week.
Spring programs offered many exciting opportunities for
the Tulane student. The committee sponsored a trip to Mexico
during semester break and, later in the spring, a journey to San
Antonio for the Hemisfair. Other activities included instruction
in Latin American dances and a salute to Norway as "country
of the month" in April.
The function of the Fine Arts committee is to provide the
campus with cultural entertainment and activities in the fields
of art, literature, cinema, and music. This year the committee
sponsored art exhibits produced by local talent as well as major
traveling exhibits. "Amah! and the Night Visitors," as produced
by the music and theater departments, was presented during
Christmas week by the Fine Arts committee. The Cine Cum Laude
film series was initiated this year with the showing of Dr. Faustus,
and The Taming of the Shrew. The committee also sponsors
the Fine Arts film series which brings a number of superior
films, strong both in artistic value and social comment, to the
campus.
K)6
Opposite, above left: Glenn Yarborough in concert at McAlister
Auditorium during the fall; Opposite, above rigbt; Hanging of the
Green during Christmas Weel( at Tulane under the direction of
Padohad; Top: Some of the entertainment provided at the Cos-mopolitan
Committee's Fete Internationale; Above: Folksinger
Raun IVlacKinnon, part of the Coffee House Circuit tour, per-forms
in Der Rathskeller; Above, right: Charlie Pyle entertains
at a Lagniappes Committee, -meeting; Rigbt: James Farmer,
sponsored by the Lyceum Committee, is shown conversing with
students in the University Center after his scheduled address.
107
f/AV£ you
fiou&ur VOU
FRESIIMCI
BOYS
MUSI 1 Above, left: Foremost critic of tlie Warren Report, Mark Lane, shown speak-ing
at McAlister Auditorium; Above: Greenbackers' Spirit Hats were the
order of the day for Tulane Freshmen for the 1967 opening game; Left: A
source of much laughter and queasy stomachs was the Recreation Com-mittee's
Bicycle Beer Drinking Race; Below: The Mark Renshaw Trio per-forming
before a typically large audience In Der Rathskeller; Opposite,
above: Banners telling of the bonfire before the game with Virginia;
Opposite, below: A scene from "Amahl and the Night Visitors."
108
TUCP
COMMITTEES
I HE Lyceum Committee, in an effort to stimulate thougtit and
perhaps even action on the Tuiane campus, attempt to present
programs on subjects that involve student interest. This has
been done primarily through the major speakers series which
has included some very intriguing and controversial lecturers.
In addition, Lyceum sponsors student forums for debate
and individual expression of thought. Speakers on specialized
topics are often presented, taking advantage of speaking talent
so readily available from the New Orleans area. During this
past year, Lyceum has sponsored several speakers of national
prominence in an effort to attract more students to its pro-grams.
While this has lessened the number of speakers, the
quality of lectures and the improved student interest attests
to the success of Lyceum's programs.
The Lagnlappes Committee maintains as its goal to provide
the Tuiane student with "a little extra" in the way of social
life. With this goal in mind, they have presented a number of
events this past year, including the annual Homecoming Dance
held at the Municipal Auditorium with Every Mother's Son and
Yesterday's Children, the Freshman Orientation Open House fea-turing
the Olympia Brass Band's delightful brand of New Orleans'
street jazz, and the Freshman Orientation dance complete with
a light show and other attempts at psychedelia.
In the second semester, Lagniappes had the opportunity
to initiate a new university ruling regarding liquor on campus.
At the Campus Lover Dance in February, students were allowed
to bring their own liquor. The dance was successful and the
B. Y. 0. L. ruling embarked with an optimistic beginning. In
the spring, Lagniappes held numerous Friday afternoon TGIF's
helping to promote Spring Fever.
The Hospitality Committee is the official host for the Tuiane
University Center Program. In order to make campus guests
and visitors feel welcome and at ease, the committee provides
receptions and tours of the campus. For members of the uni-versity,
the committee sponsors occasional coffee nights, and
for the children of students, staff, and faculty members, gives
an annual Christmas party. A travel -map, placed by the Hospi-tality
Committee, hangs in the University Center and aids stu-dents
in finding transportation for the holidays.
Padohad is the segment at the University Center Program
that is responsible for the advertising of events of the other
committees. In advertising these events the committee was
able to produce some splendid banners. Also significant was
the return to the traditional "Hanging of the Green" in which
real greenery was displayed in the University Center. Padohad
also took on the function of policing the U. C. to see that
old posters and advertisements did not clutter the building.
Greenbackers, one of the oldest organizations on campus,
is the spirit club of Tuiane. Originally an independent organiza-tion,
Greenbackers recently affiliated with the University Center
Program. This past year, Greenbackers has helped sponsor bon-fires,
team send-offs, and spirit dances. Other events have
been a lecture by Coach Pittman and the Tulane-L.S.U. football
game film. Greenbackers awards plaques to all the senior
basketball players and, in addition makes posters and banners
publicizing all athletic -contests. A notable addition this year
to the Greenbackers' spirit was a twelve-foot Green Wave ac-quired
for display at games.
109
HONOR
SOCIETIES
111
PHI BETA KAPPA
David W. Arehart
Bruce H. Baguley
Jacalyn I. Blye
George B. Brown
Barbara D. Cantella
Cheryl L. Champeau
Elizabeth D. Clark
Judith A. Fife
Walda K. Fishman
John M. Fitch
Reuben L Friedman
Janina R. Caller
Clem Goldberger
Charles E. Gow
Bruce E. Guidry
Carol J. Hermann
Janet L Hockert
David R. Johnson
Douglas G. Kahn
George B. Kuehne
Jonathan Levin
David Liftshutz
Malcolm A. Meyer
Randolph K. Miller
Susan W. Morris
Susan B. Patrick
Cynthia L. Perwin
Ricki S. Price
Andrea L. Ravinett
Joseph L Riccardi
Brenda M. Robinson
Christine A. Robinson
Regina J. Rogers
Louise Rosen
James W. Shelby
Bruce R. Smith
Phyllis G. Smith
Carol A. Sowell
Alan 0. Sw/ann
Richard Theiiing
Nancy J. Thompson
Linda R. Torrence
Benes Trus
Martin G. Werkin
Mary A. Whitfield
Deona J. Womack
William M. Yeager
Jeffrey J. Yudin
OMICRON DELTA KAPPA
Purvis W. Bane Henry Koch
Walter E. Blessey, Jr. Steve Mims
George B. Brown, Jr. James Morrill
Harold A. Chapman Colvin Norwood, Jr.
John Devlin William Pitts
Edward B. Dubuisson Wylmer Pool
Ewell Eagan, Jr. Curtis Tatar
Donald G. Ellis Richard Theiiing
Richard Gonzales Dr. Oscar Creech
Terry Habig Dr. Melvin Gruwell
Presley Jackson
MORTAR BOARD
Jean Cooper Frances Brody
Nancy Goheen DIanne Cantella
Clem Goldberger
Catherine Crews
Louise Goldman Janet Hockert
Frances Hays Barbara Stuckey
Carol Hermann Sue Todd
Ricki S. Price
Andrea Ravinette
Ann Timberlake
PHI ETA SIGMA
Richard Ashby Karl Frederickson David Miles
John Audick Daniel Garcia Francis M. Moore
Joseph Baggett Michael Geerken Michael Norton
Martin Binstock Robert C. Goodwin Edward Poitevent
Michael N. Bolton Dennis Gregoire James Price
Robert Brennan Stephen Henry James Riopelle
Joseph R. Brown, Jr. Richard P. Hoover William A. Robinson
David Castanon Wayne Johnston Charles S. Ruark, Jr.
Christopher Church Dennis Kasimiah Timothy Ryan
Lionel M. Cobo Walter Lamia Randlow Smith, Jr.
James M. Collins Lee H. Latimer Dennis Stewart
Richard Cunningham Richard D. Lester Samuel Tilden
James Dalferes Ernest Martin Steven Thorney
William Donnellan, Jr. Clyde W. McCurdy, Jr. Stephen Vann
Lawrence Dries Thomas McNamara. John R. Wiegand
John J. Eick Robert L Mendow Gary Ziegler
Chris Evans
SIGMA PI SIGMA
Bill Bottoms
Bill Boudreaux
James Bowers
V. R. Dave
Michael Donnella, III
James G. Fiasconaro
Arthur J. Gavigan
Walter Grant, III
Barry Haindel
Kenneth Hardy
Robert Hill
Judy Johnson
Larry LeBlanc
Tom J. Magee
Stephen E. Mullins
John H. Myers
Joe Nelson
Woody Norwood
B. D. Papaioannou
Richard Peacock
Robert E. Reagan
Kearny Robert
David C. Russell
Ashton J. Ryan, Jr.
Michael Saizan
Calvin Wellborn
William Yeager
112
BETA BETA BETA
Reevyn Aronson
Delia Bethell
Jacalyn Blye
Thomas Cashio
Jamie Covell
Daryl P. Domning
Mary (Chip) Enzor
Debbie A. Edwards
IVlarl( Feldman
Berandette Freedman
Harold Galena
Ann Geddes
Louise Goldman
Ben Guider, Jr.
Julie Hackney
Kathy Halsey
Vince Hamilton
Dorothy Heath
John King
Michele Levine
Craig Maumus
Sandi McMahan
Martha Mims
Sharon Muenchow
Tira Overstreet
Mike Plotkin
Gary Ring
Chris Robinson
Jane Rush
Barbara Stucky
John Tebbetts
Devra Weinstein
TAU SIGMA DELTA
Howard E. Callihan
Lee R. Connell, Jr.
Robert P. Dean
Eugene H. Fisher
William J. Hudson
Rev. Nelson C. Longnecker
Charles L Lord, Jr.
Martin T. Lott
Bruce E. Sternberg
Christopher C. Thels
John C. Wyle
ALPHA SIGMA LAMBDA
Mrs. Jessie Barringer
Neva Cosgrove
Audrey Cullen
Elaine Dufour
William C. Keiser, Jr.
Thomas Mobley
Ann Rebstock
WHO'S WHO
Richard Mark Alderman Todd Randall Green
Natalie Allison Frances Hays
Ann Armitage Carol Hermann
Dennis Aronson Janet Hockert
Sally Balch Richard Douglas Hurst
Purvis William Bane Laura Ives
John Parker Branham David Raymond Johnson
Kent Brody Sergio Alfredo Leiseca, Jr.
Regina Brody Charles Lord
Thomas Calhoun Matthew Luca
Nina Coleman Malcolm Andrew Meyer
Jean Cooper Donald Mintz
Catherine Crews James Morrill
Sylvia Dreyfus Colvin G. Norwood, Jr.
Edward Benjamin Dubuisson George Gray Plosser
E. E. Timothy Eagan Ricki Price
Barbara Edin Andrea Lynn Ravinett
Ernest Lanier Edwards Gothard Reck
Joseph Carlysle Elliott John Ragan Sanders
Charles Raymond Fernandez John Wyeth Scott
Grey Flowers Ferris George Arthur Seaver, III
James Gerard Fiasconaro Arnold Jay Shelby
Alain Paul Flowers Bruce Sternberg
Bernadette Friedman Barbara Stuckey
Glenn Michael Garte Curtis Elliott Tartar
Nancy Goheen Richard Carl Theiling
Clem Goldberger Ann Timberlake
Louise Goldman Robert Stuart Whitehill
Richard Joseph Gonzalez Richard Pearson Wilson
KAPPA DELTA PHI
Donald Abaunza
John Branham
John Dalton
Steve Davidson
Lanny Edwards
Henry Koch
Conrad Meyer
Woody Norwood
Arthur Seaver, Jr.
Ralph Whalen
Dr. Paul Trickett
ASSETS
Bunny Cornell
Joan DeJean
Christy Donahue
Cathie Dyer
Candy Johnson
Ellen Lewis
Ellen Pressburg
Ellen Ross
Ulla Jo Ule
Dee Unglaub
SIGMA XI Mrs. Janice S. McHale Jack R. Butler
David C. Russell Harold A. Chapman, Jr.
Allen Joseph St. Angelo Guillermo Chaverri
Louis A. Barker Sharon Lynn Salhi John M. Frazer
Claudio Barros Gail Sansone Gerald Giantonio
Dr. John Gil Blackburn James E. Strickland Larry L. Johnson
Dr. John W. Coffey Dr. Paul E. Thetford Charles A. Langhoff
Dr. J. Manuel Denuce Jen-Sie Hsu Tou Ernest E. Lengle, Jr.
Aurelie M. France Jacques P. Vandevoorde Nick L. Lund
Dr. Luther E. Franklin Mickey W. Via Daniel H. Matulionis
Hugo E. Gallo-Torres Adam D. Winters, III Richard E. McCrady
Kenneth A. Hardy Associates: Michael A. Murphy
Shelton E. Hendricks Frances W. Balfour Anna M. Napoli
David G. May Myra 0. Parker Carolyn Neiman
Dr. Asa Mays, Jr. Sidney J. Bennett Mrs. Michele S. Stern
113
BETA GAMMA SIGMA
Philip D. Accardo Walter Thomas Klenz
Edward Josepti Blocher Charles Gilbert Martin
James R. Butterwortli Richard S. Palmer
Robert Leon Draper John Arthur Robbins
John Paul Dreska K. Kultar Singh
Alma Louise Hammett Harry John Smith, III
William Allen Jennings Byron S. Stinson
ALPHA EPSILON
DELTA
Janice Armstrong
David Boudreaux
William H. Briggs
Charles K. Clark
Kenneth A. Cogen
Joseph Dalovisio
Steven Dinerstein
Aubert Dykes
Arnold Finkleman
Robert Flandry
Robert Freedman
Janina Caller
Henry M. Heller
Michael Hoff
Charles Johnson
Allen Kolin
Mark Klempner
James M. Laborde
Peter M. Levine
Kenneth Lichtenstein
David Lubin
Michael Lubin
Lee Meadow
Howard A. Moore
Sharon Muenchow
Alan Myers
Robert Nathan
Michael Perel
William H. Peery
Marc Ringel
Chris Robinson
Paulina A. Rognoni
Harvey Schwartz
Shalom Seltzer
Jason V. Smith
Mark Stein
Charles R. Stewart
Robert K. Thacker
William W. Turner, Jr.
Saidee M. Unglaub
Jon Willen
John Winter
CHI BETA
Leita Aycock
Jean Barton
Barbara Beisner
Susan Clade
Lynn Foster
Katherine Fraser
Jacqueline Friedman
Kathryn Jo Frost
Virginia Harris
Julie Dampen
Judith Ladenberger
Leanne Lipnick
Carole Marks
Mary Meredith
Carol Ann Meyer
Gayle Monroe
Carol Phillips
Pamela Richmond
Jeanne Taylor
Mary V. Wray
TAU BETA PI
Philip E. Baur
Wayne BriJ
Kenneth A DeVun
Maurice J Ducarpe
Richard J. Gonzalez
Danny G. Kilpatrick
William W Kyle, Jr.
Donald J. Michael
William W Powell
Jeffrey A. Roux'
ORDER OF
THE COIF
Oscar W. Boswell
Edward Earl Chase
Stephen G. Davidson
Ernest L. Edwards
Mitchell Herzog
Michael F. Little
Glen G. Magnuson, Jr.
Joel A. Mendler
Donald R. Mintz
Charles W. Nelson, Jr.
James M. Petersen
Professor Thomas J. Andre, Jr.
Professor David Bonderman
Professor L Neville Brown
Professor Harvey C. Couch, III
Professor Alain A. Levasseur
Professor W. A. J. Watson
Honorary:
Grove Stafford
PI SIGMA ALPHA John M. Devlin Melinda McKinnon
Robert Duvic Jane Nahm
Timothy E. Eagan Cynthia L Perwin
James Farwell Frank Petrusak
Robert L. Ainsworth Reuben Friedman Mary Pollingue
Alvin Andrews Joyce Gamble Drew Ranier
David M. Bethune Margaret E. Gates David Rees
Mary A. Bivens Robert H. Girard Robert Rosemont
Steven Bolson Eileen Gleason Dennis F. Schill
Regina Brody Robert M. Hardy, Jr. David Sigler
Walter Brooks Henry Harnage Leonard Simmons
Mary A. Bryant David R. Johnson Donna Solomon
Lorraine G. Caffery Michelle Jumonville William S. Stone
Sarah Churney Linda Lerner Richard C. Theiling
Barbara R. Dean Craig W. Maumus Janet Wessler
Roger M. Deming W. Robert Morgan Gregory D. White
ALPHA OMICRON ALPHA John B. Bass
Arnold H. Blaufuss, Jr.
Charles D. Goodwin
Jefferson F. Hollingsworth
Donnell Schilling
James R. Simmons
Jack M. Covin Charles M. Lindsey Carmela L Tardo
Philip J. Daroca Richard E. McCall Dr. Robert H. Heath
Arthur Adelstein Thomas E. Duncan Alvin M. Douchell Dr. Herbert Ichinose
Arnold Atkins Gary D. Frentz Alvin M. Rouchell Dr. James Reynolds
1M.
LEADERSHIP
HALL OF FAME
Left: Andie Ravinett, Sally Balch, Jeff Yudin, Clem Goldberger, Don Minitz,
"Spot"; Below: Larry Rosenblum, Miss Jean Danieison, Sylvia Dreyfus, Dr.
Stephen Zeff, Kent Brody, Gray Plosser, Frances Hayes, Suzy Schwartz, Nat
' Allison, Hank Harnage, Marilyn Thomas, Jean Cooper.
115
116
MCADEMIC excellence is ostensibly one of the goals towards
which Tulane strives. The Harvard of the South is now a little
tarnished by the encroachment of Berkley on the Bayous, but
both comparisons evoke images of intelligent people doing intel-ligent,
albiet often incomprehensible, things; of faculty expound-ing
exciting ideas and students listening and reacting.
The comparison is not valid except in limited areas. Medi-cine
is unquestionably Tulane's claim to international recognition.
But this has served to justify the concept held by some that
Tulane is a "pre-med" school filled with aspiring young phy-sicians-
to-be. The theatre department, though small (and some
say getting smaller), is still one of the better in the nation.
The math department is internationally known for its topological
research. Due to the performance of its graduates, the School
of Architecture has come to be regarded as probably the finest
in the South and is certainly well respected throughout the
nation. The students in the other divisions of the university
think of it more as a home for itenerant hippies and a hotbed
of radical campus activity, an impression not altered by the
appearance of certain peculiar contraptions from time to time
in front of Stanley Thomas Hall. The architecture students claim
to be demonstrating their individuality and crying out for some
kind of recognition, if only laughter. The Business School, long
acknowledged a fine institution by those involved in business
education, is becoming prominent in managerial circles as well.
The Graduate School has grown quite large, but has not estab-lished
itself as an identifiable unit. It appears to the outsider
a collection of odds and ends in both faculty and facilities.
This may not be the case, but it certainly seems so.
The knowledge, then, is there to be imparted. At least in
some places on campus. Yet there is not the reaction that
you might expect from a "Harvard of the South.'" It seems
that no one is really enthusiastic about his CidSSBS- This
surely is a generalization. Many are not enthused. Many stu-dents
find that the most important thing to consider when
registering for a course is the time it is offered (the later the
better) and the days it is available (MWF is best, TTS, undesir-able,
especially S.) along with the percentage of A's given in
past years.
But it happens that once in a while, the right hour, MWF,
and a great teacher all come together to produce one of those
rare courses that are interesting, exciting, probing; in short,
worthwhile. It might be Bailkey's western civ. or Irion's psy-chology,
or maybe Sanzenbach's French. No matter; it happened,
and everyone is happy, student, teacher, IBM machine. Mom and
Dad. These are the students who learn.
What is unfortunate is that these courses are discovered
by accident; they are the exception to the rule, and the rule
is pretty dull. And it will be so long as there is no way to
recognize those teachers who make going to class in the morning
something more than a chore. A mechanicism for this type
of recognition was proposed this past year by some members
of the student senate in the form of a course evaluation to
be produced annually by students and published in the hope
that those teachers who actually taught would find their class-rooms
full to the point of overflowing, while those who found
three students in attendance on opening day would take time
to find out why.
It is hoped that something of this nature will be done.
117
118
CLASSES
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
119
For many architecture freshmen, the first real con-tact
they have with the subject comes with their
first design class, and what an initial contact they
receive, for there to greet them is first year design
professor, Robert Schenker. For the weak-willed and
for those who feel that their opinions are equivalent
to the professors', a week with Professor Schenker is
a long remembered experience. Having no tolerance
for some of the nonsense known to come from young
architects, Schenker quickly sets the record straight
by letting his students know that they know very
little, if anything at all about architecture, and for
them to learn, it will take more absolute dedication
and hard work than they ever believed possible.
Professor Schenker, who graduated from Columbia,
has taught design at Tulane since 1954. He also
teaches a fourth year course on the theory of
architecture. Not a man of many words. Professor
Schenker's communications are succinct and to the
point, letting the student know just how bad or, on
rare occasions, how good his design is. Most students
are not able to realize the value of Professor Schen-ker's
classroom "modus operandi" until they have
advanced past their first year. During that traumatic
period the student is much too busy trying to come
up with designs good enough to warrant Schenker's
approval and living in fear of another bad critique.
Professor Schenker's professional approach to
teaching is educational to the student in itself, for
after graduation the student deals with clients, the
majority of whom are exasperating enough to warrant
the architect's considering murder. Professor Schen-ker
makes the young student justify his design in a
practical manner while retaining the aesthetics, origi-nality,
and creativity incorporated in the work.
I HE other design instructor that first year architec-ture
students must learn to tolerate is Assistant
Professor Robert Helmer. Mr. Helmer does not hold
an architectural degree. In fact, for eleven years
after he began teaching at Tulane in 1954 he taught
Drawing antf Painting. He began work with the first
year design class in 1965.
As an artist Mr. Helmer has established quite a
reputation in New Orleans as well as elsewhere. He
has had one man shows at 331 Gallery and the Orleans
Gallery, of which he is a co-founder, and has had
works displayed in traveling shows in South America,
the Orient, New York, and much of Europe. In 1960,
Mr. Helmer was featured in the art journal, Art in
America.
In class Mr. Helmer gives an impression of great
enthusiasm, except when he finds a design that
offends him, something he manages to find with
tremendous regularity. But give him a good design,
and he is a joy to behold. His comments are usually
loaded, either with suggestions, or if it is a bad day,
sarcasm. Mr. Helmer prefers to approach architecture,
"as a form finding, problem solving activity with the
hope that the acquisition of the ability to first solve
the problem will arm the student with the ability to
face future unknown problems with a high degree of
confidence in his own ability."
Mr. Helmer offers the first year student quite a
refined source of aesthetic tastes and is a great help
in bringing the novice student's design standards
back into reality or out of the doldrums. Another
great service that Mr. Helmer offers the student is
his ability to aid him in their presentation techniques.
With the combination of Professor Schenker and Mr.
Helmer the first year design student receives an
excellent initiation into architectural design besides
having his ego lowered several notches and having
the opportunity to view the sun rise several times
during the course of the year.
UNE of the younger faculty members in the School of
Architecture and easily one of the most popular is
Professor William Turner. Professor Turner, came to
Tulane from Auburn in 1964 holds a Bachelor of
Architecture degree from Clemson College. At Tulane
he is second year design professor and teaches a
fourth year course in- Urban Planning.
His youth and enthusiasm makes him a very vitaf
faculty member as these two assets aid greatly in
his being able to establish communication with the
student. This dialogue with the student is further
aided by Turner's willingness to become involved in
student projects such as last year's Gentle Thursday
and this year's Architect's Week. In his classes Pro-fessor
Turner is known for his long discussion ses-sions
with his students about particular aspects of a
design problem. These disetssions are designed to
get the student to think about the problem, hopefully
in a way that will open his eyes to things he has not
realized before. Other of his long discussions involve
educating the class on building techniques, basic
structural and mechanical rules in construction, and
other conversations involving student's activities, opin-ions
of what they are deriving from their education,
and what they would like to derive from it.
One of the changes Turner as well as the rest of
the faculty, would like to see implemented in the
near future is a revamping of the school's curriculum,
something that is presently under serious considera-tion,
and the establishment at Tulane of a graduate
school in architecture. The establishment of such a
school at Tulane would fill a great void in architec-tural
education in the south, for the great preponder-ance
of respected architectural graduate schools are
in the northeastern United States.
Professor Turner's refreshing attitude toward stu-dents
and their opinions and his cognizance of prob-lems
in the immediate area around Tulane that his
students can experience first hand serve to exemplify
not only the vital role that the School of Architecture
can play in the University, but also in New Orleans.
R|
^^^^^^^^H
One of the more exciting and stimulating design
professors at Tulane is Professor Wllford F. Calongne
who teaches third year and also serves the school as
assistant dean. IVlr, Calongne has been teaching de-sign
at Tulane for fifteen years. He received a B.S.
degree from Tulane in 1944 and a Bachelor of Science
in Architecture in 1947. In addition to his duties at
the school he has maintained a private practice of
varying proportions in New Orleans since 1947.
Without a doubt one of the favorite and most re-spected
professors in the school, Professor Calongne
combines a tremendous design ability of his own with
an uncanny ability to communicate with the student
concerning a design proposal. As a result, Mr. Ca-longne
is able to draw untapped potential from a
student which results in pleasant surprises for both
the faculty and student.
Mr. Calongne's design problems are known among
students for the interest they can stimulate in the
designer and the fact that Calongne expects the de-signer
to use as much imagination and originality as
possible. At times students may feel that Mr. Ca-longne's
problems border on fantasy and that a more
(ealistic approach should be taken. But as any pro-fessionat
architect knows, it is very seldom that one
gets a client who is really willing to let the archi-tect
use his imagination, so when that rare individual
does appear the architect must have an imagination
that has been developed. It is certainly reasonable
to suppose that an imaginatively trained architect
will produce better work than one who was weaned
on the design of F.H.A. and builder's homes, Graphic
Standard's details, or textbook design procedures.
CLASSES
ARCHITECTURE FACULTY
121
ARCHITECTURE
SENIORS
«s^ «»1
m^^
First Row:
CARLOS A. ARCHILLA, Mayaquez, Puerto Rico,
RICHARD RAWLS BARNETT, Plant City, Fla.
ROBERT P. DEAN, JR., New Orleans, La.i J.Y.A.; Sailing Club.
Second Row:
KELEAL HASSIN, JR., Yazoo City,
WILLIAM J. HUDSON, Shelbyville,
STEPHEN ISOM, Lagrange Park, I
Miss.: Kappa Sigma.
Tenn.; Tau Sigma Delta.
I.; Sigma Nu.
Third Row:
ALLAN M. LEVY, Memphis, Tenn.; Kiosk Club; Vice-President, School of Archi-tecture:
Vice-President, American Institute of Architects; President Senior
Class, School of Architecture.
CHARLES LORD, New Orleans, La.; Student Senate; President, School of Archi-tecture;
HULLABALOO cartoonist; Kiosk Club; Sailing Club.
DONALD A. MAGINNIS, III, New Orleans, La.; American Institute of Architects;
Vice-President, Senior Class; Delta Kappa Epsilon.
Fourth Row:
R. H. MONSARRAT, Memphis, Tenn.
JAMES L. SW/OOP, New Orleans, La.; Kappa Alpha.
122
First Row:
JEFF ARMITAGE, East Lansing, Micli. Freshman
WILLIAM A. BAER, St. Louis, Mo.; Sophomore
RICHARD BALDERSTON, Glen Mills, Pa.; Junior
ARCHITECTURE
UNDERGRADUATES
i
Second Row:
RONALD BARLOW, Annandale, Va.; Freshman
RICHARD BAUMANN, Cranford, N. J.; Junior
GERALD W. BILLES, Butler, Pa.: Junior
A^^
Third Row:
JON BLOSS BLEHAR, Dallas, Texas; Sophomore
LINDA ANNE BRALEY, Bryan, Texas; Junior
KENNETH T. BROWN, Washington, D. C; Fourth Year
Fourth Row:
ROGER BROWN, Metairie. La.; Sophomore
SHELDON HOWARD CANTOR, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Freshman
JOHN CAREY, Bethesda, Md.; Freshman
Fifth Row:
BENJAMIN PAUL CHAIT, Miami, Fla.; Junior
RICHARD J. CHARLESWORTH, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Junior
ALVIN J. COX, New Orleans, La.; Freshman L^i^ii^
Sixth Row:
WALTER M. DALY, Manhasset, N. Y.; Freshman
MANVEL DE LEMOS, San Juan, P. R.; Sophomore
ROBERT DE MARCO, Schenectady, N. Y.; Sophomore
Seventh Row:
MICHAEL J. EWIN, Harahan, La.; Freshman
NEAL FLEMING, Bethesda, Md.; Sophomore
PAT FLORY, New Iberia, La.; Sophomore
1^ 1^
A A^
^ 123
ARCHITECTURE
UNDERGRADUATES
aMA^^
First Row;
JOHN GOLDSTEIN, St. Louis, IVIo.; Freshman
LEWIS A. GRAEBER, iVIarks, IVIiss.; Sophomore
CHRISTOPHER GREEN, St. Thomas, V. I.; Junior
Second Row:
JOHN HANNA, Maplewood, La.; Sophomore
ERIC V. HOSKINSON, Denver, Colo.; Junior.
ROBERT HUMPHREY, Lake Worth, Fla.; Junior
Third Row:
EDWARD JENDREY, Keene, Va.; Fourth Year
THOMAS H. JOHNSTON, Kansas City, Mo.; Junior
JOAN KING, Alexandria, La.; Freshman
Fourth Row:
CHRIS KNIGHT, Short Hills, N. J.; Freshman
WILLIAM P. LAMMEY, Cinnaminson, N. J.; Junior
RIC LEBOEUF, Scotia, N. Y.; Junior
Fifth Row:
PAUL H. LEONARD, Jennings, Ala.; Freshman
DALE LONG, Grosse Pointe, Mich.; Freshma'n
STEPHEN MANN, Houston, Texas; Sophomore
Sixth Row:
RICHARD C. MAXWELL, New Orleans, La.; Fourth Year
CHARLES McGEE, Shreveport, La.; Freshman
GEORGE MILLER, Tulsa, Okla.; Sophomore
Seventh Row:
MICHAEL NIUS, Atlanta, Ga,; Sophomore
JOE OSBORNE, Middletown, Ohio; Freshman
GERALD S. PFEFFER, Englewood, N. J.; Fourth Year
124
First Row:
HAROLD PIQUE, JR., New Orleans, La.; Freshman
JEFF RAYMOND, North Miami Beach, Fla.; Sophomore
JAMES S. REID, St. Louis, Mo.; Freshman
JAMES G. ROGERS, III, San Diego, Calif.; Junior
Second Row:
LOUIS ROVELLI, Albany, N. Y.; Freshman
JIM SALMI, Denver, Colo.; Sophomore
MARY D. SCHAUB, Gambrius, Md.; Sophomore
PETER A. SCHLESINGER, Auburn, Ala.; Sophomore
Third Row:
JOHN A. SCHUPP, JR., Atlanta, Ga.; Junior
JOHN SCURRY, Dallas, Texas; Junior
EVAN SOULE, New Orleans, La.; Freshman
DALE SPIZER, New Orleans, La.; Sophomore
Fourth Row:
WILLIAM STALEY, Nashville, Tenn.; Sophomore
JERRY STEPHENSON, Valley Lee, Md.; Sophomore
STEPHEN L. SUPLEE, Clayton, N. J.; Sophomore
SALLY SWEENY, Auburn, Ala.; Freshman
ARCHITECTURE
UNDERGRADUATES
4iik
^Hi^'
1-tss «^ j^i
'-
...... ;
^\
f ::''"'^
V'
%
Fifth Row:
ANDREW TRIVERS, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Fourth Year
GARY UHLIG, Waltham, Mass.; Freshman
RANDOLPH VON BARYMANN, San Jose, Costa, Rica; Sophomore
RALPH E. WAFER, Shreveport, La.; Junior
Sixth Row:
NORMAND GEORGE WILKINSON, Longview, Texas; Freshman
ROBERT J. WILSON, JR., Little Rock, Ark.; Freshman
KAREN WISZNIA, Corpus Christi, Texas; Freshman
BESSIE WYMAN, West Point, Miss.; Sophomore
Seventh Row:
DALE ZINN, Santa Fe, N. M.; Freshman
125
126
127
Dr. CHARLES PEACOCK began his career as a high
school teacher. He also taught in a country school
where all eight grades were taught in one room
before going to graduate school to obtain his Doctor-ate
in Physics, so he has been directly involved with
education on all levels. One point he feels the pro-fessor
must always l(eep in mind is that while
abstraction is a part of learning, people need some
sort of model to handle and to reason with. Conse-quently,
he tries to deal with tangible models as far
as he can in his physics courses. Students familiar
with first year college physics will recall the pendu-lums
and springs that littered the classroom. While
it is simple to demonstrate Hookes law and Newtons
laws of motion, the manifestation of phase space of
six dimensions and quantum mechanics becomes more
difficult. Dr. Peacock manages to bring these concepts
down to real terms, to the delight of his contemporary
physics students.
Because science has become such a large part of
education in the last twenty years, Dr. Peacock feels
that all "educated" people today should have some
knowledge of science. He likes to think of physics as
the parent science, because it is related to all the
other sciences, since they utilize methods devised by
physicists in their research techniques. Dr. Peacock
also is in favor of the concept of a physics course
for the humanities. He does feel that such a project
would be difficult for a small department, such as
the one at Tulane, which must play several roles in
the university. The department helps train pre-med
and other sicence students, as well as its own majors,
so in the past its faculty has not been able to give
sufficient attention to the bridging of such a gap
between the humanities and the sciences. In such a
course, the mathematical language would be soft-peddled
to the extent that the student not trained
in mathematics could still grasp the basic concepts
of physics.
I WO years after Dr. Milton Fingerman received his
Ph.D. from Northwestern in 1952, he came to Tulane.
He came a day early for his interview and spent the
whole day in the French Quarter, after which he de-cided
to accept any offer made him. He spent the
two years prior to his arrival at Tulane in the army,
during the course of which he was concerned with
biological warfare, a subject In which he still re-tains
a vital interest. Dr. Fingerman is ambivalent in
his feelings toward current efforts to stop biological
warfare and to end secret research on university
campuses. He feels that such work is necessary for
national security, but would not do classified research
himself unless he felt obliged to because of an all-out
war.
Part of his adversity towards such classified re-search
stems from the enjoyment he receives from
talking about his work. Dr. Fingerman is presently
studying the color changes in fiddler crabs and craw-fish.
Every animal that has been investigated, and
many plants as well, have built in biological clocks.
Dr. Fingerman, for example, has kept his crabs in
total darkness for 44 days, and they have continued
to function normally. There is interest in this type
of study today because of space flight, and the at-tempts
that are being made to determine what type
of schedule keeps astronauts most efficient. Such
study is also important for jet travel in which individ-uals
are moved quickly across time zones. After such
rapid changes, human biological clocks often require
days to readjust.
STUDENTS should take more initiative to come and
talk with professors. They sometimes are apologetic
about taking up even a little of a teacher's time, but
it seems to me that they are paying for it."
Maybe it is this personable attitude, above all else,
that has made Dr. Arthur L. Irion one of the most
likeable of the university's faculty members. A gradu-ate
of the University of Missouri who received his
Ph.D. at the University of Iowa, he is one of the
most well-known and dynamic members of the Psy-chology
Department.
As any undergraduate who has taken Introductory
Psychology knows, Irion is one of the all too few
interesting teachers to whom any student could pos-sibly
be exposed. No matter how dry the subjects
of his lectures might seem — from etiology to
Mongolid idiocy — he manages to make them both
interesting and entertaining. Perhaps it is the lively
intonation he puts into every sentence. Perhaps it is
his sense of humor which permeates into stories
ranging from Pavlov's misadventures with his dogs to
Irion's own encountered while building a harpsichord.
Or perhaps it is his own personal informality which
enables students to approach his subject with sharper
interest, well-defined questions and much more aca-demic
ease.
Eclipsing all of these aspects, however, is still that
basic quality of Irion's character — his deep and
personal interest in his students. It i? an interest
which goes well beyond his classroom. An interest
perhaps based in the study of psychology, but none
the less still a part of his nature. And it is this basic
interest which makes him more than a teacher in the
eyes of his students.
n>
ARTS AND SCIENCES
FACULTY
Dr. HANS iONASSEN is one of those rare individuals
who combines tlie abilities of a seasoned and In-ventive
scientist with the communicative powers of
a great teacher. There are many fine chemists and a
number of good teachers, but the great chemist-teacher
(or biologist-teacher, or scientist-teacher) is
a bit uncommon.
Why bother teaching chemistry to freshmen whose
only interest in the subject is eight required credit
hours?. Asl( Dr. Jonassen and you will get an im-passioned
explanation of the importance of the
sciences In general and the scientific method in
particular. "Look at your clothes! The buttons are
plastic, the material In your shirt Is synthetic. Your
shoes may be the product of an industrial chemist
rather than an aged cow." After a few lectures along
this line, not forgetting the elements of the subject (if
you will forgive the Interviewer's pun) the passive
student has come to enjoy his hour in Richardson
Chemistry, mainly because of the enthusiasm Cr.
Jonassen exhibits in the classroom. Here is a Ph.D.
chemist getting all worked up over the symetry of
the elementary Bohr atom. What student could stand
by and let himself be left out of what must surely
be an exciting excursion into the world of the
microscopic?
Dr. Jonassen has an impressive record: Ph.D. from
the University of Illinois, Co-Editor of the seven vol-ume
series, "Techniques of Inorganic Chemistry",
adviser to the U.S. Department of Naval Weapons, and
author of over 120 professional papers.
Hans Jonassen, one of Tulane's outstanding teach-ers,
a man who has made Chemistry and the sciences
something more than a requirement for thousands of
Tulanians.
ssxs^stsixi^ ^r«4K
Dr. frank BIRTEL of the Arts & Sciences math de-partment
feels that in undergraduate education it is
the teacher's responsibility to conduct a type of
revival meeting. Dr. Birtel is convinced that the
student retains only a small amount of information
from the course itself, and failure on the part of the
teacher to motivate the student to pursue the study
further can be equated with failure in the course
With this in mind. Dr. Birtel tries to conduct a mathe-matical
revival meeting, so that his students could
almost say "Amen, Brother" at the end of each hour.
He believes that it is important for an undergraduate
to see an individual become excited with his specialty
and somehow involve the class in his excitement.
Mathematics can be thought of as a real index to
the culture of a society. As Dr. Birtel observes, times
in history when mathematical activity was at its peak
have also been times when general intellectual activity
was at its peak. Math departments tend to neglect
their service courses to the humanities, often be-cause
the humanities do not demand them.
In connection with this need, Dr. Birtel advocates
two possible new types of math courses. One such
course would involve the selection of a single prob-lem
solved in the last twenty-five years, and working
back from the solution to the problem itself. The
student completing this course would know only a
single problem but he would know it in the way a
mathematician knows it. Another course would con-sist
of nothing but counter-examples. Since the
student would learn no theorems, he would be frantic
to find something true in his mathematical system.
1-29
I F something interferes with your routine, it may
irritate you for a short time, but you quickly become
accustomed to It." This statement may not seem par-ticularly
striking, but you must bear in mind that It
was made by Dr. Hugh Rankin, with reference to the
temporary (we hope) state of the Tulane History De-partment,
whose classes will be scattered over the
whole campus when the familiar History building is
torn down next year to make room for the new
science complex. This stoic attitude might be ex-pected
of a man who has had as diverse a career
as has Dr. Rankin. During the depression, he worked
in a clothing store. At one point during the Second
World War he supervised construction work In the
Army, at which time he sustained several Injuries
which he credits with his decision to enter the
teaching profession. After being released from the
service, he returned to college and studied history,
with emphasis on colonial development in America.
In class, Dr. Rankin displays the same kind of toler-ance
that he shows for the uprooting of his depart-ment.
A student need never fear being embarrassed
for expressing an idea or notion that might bring
a torrent of scorn from some professors. Each idea
is explored and reasons found for its validity or the
lack thereof. Rankin is one who maintains that no
absolute statements can be made about great men
from a study of their writings, just as one cannot
prove any thing startling by quoting the Bible; there
are always quotations supporting the opposite view-point.
Dr. Rankin has never lost his enthusiasm for
athletics, in which he participated extensively while
in college. He now serves as faculty chairman for
athletics and accompanies the varsity teams on many
of their out-of-town engagements. He finds that this
association with young people, along with that in the
classroom, has the distinctly desirable effect of
keeping him young. Though he values the insight into
young minds that his position allows him, he is quick
to point out that he does not necessarily agree. But
these points of disagreement lead to some of the
more satisfying discussions that a student will likely
find at Tulane.
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
First Row:
HAROLD W. AARONS, Denver, Colo.; J.Y.A.; Scholars and Fellows; University
Orchestra; Tulane University Theatre, Treasurer-Historian; Menuet House Coun-cil;
Inter-House Council.
ISAAC ADAMS, New Orleans, La.; President, Irby House Council; Vice-President,
Inter-House Council; Chairman, Tulane House Council Judiciary Committee.
RICHARD ALDERMAN, Pittsford, N. Y.
Second Row:
HARRY STILES ANDERSON, Clarksdale, IVliss.; Arnold Air Society; Scabbard and
Blade; Air Force ROTC; Kappa Sigma.
JOHN W. ANDERSON, New Orleans, La.
AUBRA H. ANTHONY, JR.; Tulane Scholars Program; Scabbard and Blade; Arnold
Air Society; Treasurer, Kappa Sigma.
Third Row:
ALEX R. ASHY, Eunice, La.; Student Welfare Board; President, Alpha Sigma Phi.
ALVIN J. AUBRY, JR., New Orleans, La.
THOMAS BARR, New Orleans, La.; Kappa Alpha.
Fourth Row:
JONATHAN BARRON, New Rochelle, N. Y.; Project Opportunity; JAMBALAYA
Staff, Sports Editor.
CHRISTOPHER S. BECKER, Brownsville, Texas; Scabbard and Blade.
GILBERTO F. BENITEZ, Santurce, P. R.; Soccer Club.
Fifth Row:
DAVID BERCUSON, North Miami, Fla.; President, Tulane Pre-Law Students;
President, Derickson House; Inter-House Council; Varsity Swimming; Lyceum
Committee; Sailing Club.
GEORGE BISCHOF, New Orleans, La.
GEORGE M. BLACKBURN, Dearborn, Mich.
Sixth Row:
JAMES N. BLAIN, Metairie, La.; Pi Kappa Alpha.
MARK BLANK, JR., Jenkintown, Pa.; Cactus; WTUL; A Capella Choir.
JERALD P. BLOCK, Thibodaux, La.
Seventh Row:
STEVEN BOLSON, Teaneck, N. J.; Student Senate; Project Opportunity; Presi-dent,
Tau Epsilon Phi.
FRANK C. BOUCEK, Coral Gables, Fla.
CREED W. BRIERRE, New Orleans, La.; Kappa Alpha.
130
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
First Row:
WILLIAM V. BRIERRE, JR., New Orleans, La.; Kappa Alpha.
WALTER R. BROOKS, Metairie, La.; Pi Sigma Alpha.
JOHN C. BROWER, Portland, Ore.
Second Row:
GEORGE B. BROWN, Gainesville, Fla.
NELSON C. BROWN, New Orleans, La.; Student Welfare Committee; Project
Opportunity; Assistant Manager, WTUL; HULLABALOO.
RONALD J. BROWN, Paragould, Ark.; Phi Eta Sigma; Tulane Scholars Program.
Third Row:
EUGENE CAMPAGNOLA, Beverly Farms, Mass.; Navy ROTC; Intramural Athletics
Council; Phi Delta Theta.
LOUIS CAMPOMENOSI, Arlington, Va.; Varsity Football.
STANLEY D. CARSON, Miami, Okla.; Alpha Chi Sigma; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Pan-hellenic
Council; Kappa Sigma.
Fourth Row:
DAVID CARTER, Jacksonville, Fla.; Pre-Law Society; Latin American Organization;
Cosmopolitan Committee; Sailing Club; Sigma Nu.
ROBERT J. CATANZARO, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Beta Beta Beta; Pre Medical
Society; Pi Kappa Alpha.
HUGH E. CHERRY, Anderson, Ind.; Army ROTC; Kappa Alpha.
Fifth Row:
MARTIN L. CLAXTON, New Orleans, La.; Young Conservatives Club; Young
Republicans Club.
STANLEY J. COHEN, Atlanta, Ga.; Zeta Beta Tau.
SCOTT E. COLEMAN, New York, N. Y.; Pre Medical Society; Lagniappes Com-mittee;
Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Sixth Row:
ANGUS B. COMPSON, Rye, N. Y.
CHARLES R. CONEWAY, JR., Houston, Texas; Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
MICHAEL E. CONROY, Chicago, III.; Latin American Organization; Volunteers
International Association.
Seventh Row:
ROBERT MICHAEL COSGROVE, New Orleans, La.; A.S.M.E.; Anchor and Chain
Society; Intramural Track; Beta Theta Pi.
TIMOTHY COUGHLIN, Dayton, Ohio; Alpha Delta Epsilon; Varsity Football; All
S.E.C. Academic Team; Freshman Track; Project Opportunity; Dean's list;
Treasurer, Phi Delta Theta.
GEORGE R. R. CRUCE, Houston, Texas; Sailing Club.
131
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
5«*ll'l;T;:::t'!
First Row:
WILLIAM V. DALFERES, JR., New Orleans, La.; Hospitality Committee; Green-backers;
Recreation Committee; Pi Kappa Alpha.
STEPHEN DANNEMAN, Atlanta, Ga.; Pre Medical Society; Publicity Committee;
Sigma Alpha Mu.
ORIN DAVIDSON, Germantown, Tenn.; President, Sigma Chi.
Second Row:
ROBERT KENT DAWSON, Scottsboro, Ala.; Scabbard and Blade; Pre Medical
Society; Fellowship of Christian Athletes; Vice-President, Senior Class.
BRUCE DEBARTOLO, New Orleans, La.; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Freshman Football.
DAVID DENNING, St. Louis, Mo.; Scabbard and Blade; Phi Delta Theta.
Third Row:
JOHN M. DEVLIN, Houston, Texas; Omicron Delta Kappa; Pi Sigma Alpha;
Pre Law Society; Scabbard and Blade; Commander of Arnold Air Society;
Senior Advisor, Bechtel House; Assistant Director, Robert Sharp Hall; Vice-
President, Phi Kappa Sigma.
PETE DIFFLEY, Pensacola, Fla.; Vice-President, Scabbard and Blade; Phi Kappa
Sigma.
DARYL P. DOMNING, Biloxi, Miss.; Beta Beta Beta; Sigma Gamma Epsilon;
Sailing Club; Newman Club.
Fourth Row:
G. PAUL DORSEY, New Orleans, La.; Alpha Phi Omega; Pre Medical Society;
Sailing Club.
ROBERT DUHON, Abbeville, La.; Varsity Football; Baseball.
GARY LOUIS DUKER, New Orleans, La.; Arnold Air Society; Scabbard and Blade;
Air Force ROTC, Drum and Bugle Corps.
Fifth Row:
ROBERT EISENBERG, Champaign, III.; Pre Medical Society; Lyceum Committee;
Lacrosse Team; Vice-President, Sigma Alpha Mu.
DAVID ALLEN ELDRIDGE, Dallas, Texas; Greenbackers, Recreation Committee,
President, House Council.
MICHAEL THOMAS ELIAS, Laurel, Miss.; Pershing Rifles Drill Team; Pi Kappa
Alpha.
Sixth Row:
JOSEPH D. EUBANKS, Honolulu, Hawaii.
VICTOR M. EUMONT, JR., New Orleans, La.; Varsity Football.
ERIC EVANS, Lexington, Ky.; Varsity Football; Fellowship of Christian Athletes.
Seventh Row:
CLOYD L. EZELL, JR., Ocean Springs, Miss.; Tulane Scholars Program; Baptist
Student Union.
LESLIE G. FEIN, Little Rock, Ark.; Tulane Honor Board; Secretary, Junior Class;
HULLABALOO; Greenbackers; Zeta Beta Tau.
MARK ROBERT FELDMAN, Creve Coeur, Mo.; Beta Beta Beta; Pre Medical
Society; Dean's list; Tulane Band; Tulanians; Campus Nite; Tau Epsilon Phi.
132
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
First Row:
GEORGE FERTIHA, New York, N. Y.; Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
JOHN M. FITCH, Memphis, Tenn.; Phi Eta Sigma; Scholars and Fellows; Latin
American Organization; Project Opportunity; Tulane Band; HULLABALOO; Air
Force Drum and Bugle Corps; Treasurer, Newman Club.
MICHAEL K. FITZPATRICK, New Orleans, La.; Varsity Football; Greenbackers;
House Council; Newman Club; Sailing Club; Kappa Alpha.
Second Row:
ALAIN PAUL FLOWERS, Orlando, Fla.; Scholars and Fellows; Air Force ROTC,
Drum and Bugle Corps; Scabbard and Blade; Student Senate; Student Senate
Welfare Committee; JAMBALAYA Staff; Campus Nite; McBryde House Council;
Lyceum Committee.
MICHAEL D. FOWLER, Cocoa, Fla.; Delta Tau Delta.
AARON J. FRIEDMAN, Houston, Texas; Alpha Phi Omega, Chairman, Padohad;
JAMBALAYA Staff; University Center Board Staff; Student Activities Key; House
Council. JIM £^t^
Third Row:
REUBEN FRIEDMAN, New Orleans, La.; Eta Sigma Phi; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi
Sigma Alpha; Tulane Scholars Program; Hillel Foundation; Pre Law Society.
LAWRENCE FULLERTON, St. Petersburg, Fla ; President, Scabbard and Blade;
Inter House Council; Delta Tau Delta.
HAROLD GALENA, Worcester, Mass.; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Treasurer, Pre Medical
Society; J.Y.A.; Spotlighters Committee; Tau Epsilon Phi.
Fourth Row:
GARY GARSON, West Palm Beach, Fla.
STEVEN GINSBERG, Ft, Worth, Texas; Psi Chi; Greenbackers; Lagniappes Com-mittee;
Sigma Alpha Mu.
MICHAEL GOLDSTEIN, Ballwin, Md.; Co-Captain, Varsity Swim Team; All SEC.
Swim Team; "T" Club; Sigma Alpha Mu.
Fifth Row:
ROBERT GORAL, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
CRAIG A. GRAY, Baltimore, Md.
BRUCE E. GUIDRY, Houma, La.; Phi Eta Sigma; Varsity Football.
Sixth Row:
WILLIAM C. GUILLORY, JR., Pineville, La.; Pan-hellenic Council, Sigma Chi.
PAUL S. GULBAS, El Paso, Texas; Beta Beta Beta; Pre Medical Society;
Recreation Committee; Student Directory Staff; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
RONALD F. GURTLER, New Orleans, La.; Arnold Air Society; Air Force ROTC;
Kappa Alpha.
Seventh Row:
CHARLES R. HALL, Weston, Mo.; Delta Tau Delta.
VINCENT D. HAMILTON, Yuba City, Calif.; Beta Beta Beta; Pre Medical Society;
Dean's List; Delta Tau Delta.
WADE HANKS, Kaplan, La.; Sigma Chi.
133
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
M^
First Row:
STEVE HARLAN, Diamond Head, Hawaii; Zeta Beta Tau.
HANK HARNAGE, St. Petersburg, Fla.; Omicron Delta Kappa; Plii Eta Sigma;
President, Student Body; President, University Center Board; Tulanians; Cheer-leader;
Who's Who; Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
STEVE A. HARNETT, New Orleans, La.; Varsity Football.
Second Row:
STEPHEN HEFFNER, Plantation, Fla,
THOMAS M. HERZ, Coral Gables, Fla.; J.Y.A.; Tulane Scholars Program; Music
Committee; Orchestra.
ERIC HOLTER, Redington Beach, Fla.; Arnold Air Society.
Third Row:
JAMES PRESLEY JACKSON, Litte Rock, Ark.; Vice President, Alpha Epsilon Delta;
Vice-President Sophomore Class; President, Junior Class; Student Senate; Vice-
President, Kappa Sigma.
RICHARD JACOBS, New Orleans, La.; Phi Eta Sigma; Tulane Scholars Program;
J.Y.A.; Zeta Beta Tau.
JAMES F. JANCIK, Caldwell, Texas; Co-Captain, Varsity Football; Academic Ail-
American.
Fourth Row:
DAVID R. JOHNSON, Bartlesville, Okla.; Pi Sigma Alpha; Tulane Scholars Pro-gram;
Arnold Air Society; Scabbard and Blade; Air Force ROTC Distinguished
Military Cadet; Tulanians.
DENNIS S. KAHANE, New York City, N. Y.
DOUGLAS G. KAHN, Miami Beach, Fla.; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Phi Eta Sigma;
Tulane Scholars Program; J.Y.A.; Pre Medical Society.
Fifth Row:
DONALD N. KEARNS, Baton Rouge, La.
DALE R. KILPATRICK, South Orange, N. J ; Secretary, Scabbard and Blade;
Chaplain, Arnold Air Society; President, Young Republicans.
HENRY J. KOCH, Demopolis, Ala.; President, House Council; Inter-House Council;
Senior Advisor; Honor Board; Vice-President, Junior Class; Lagniappes Com-mittee;
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Sixth Row:
JAY D. KRAVITZ, University Heights, Ohio; J.Y.A.; Tulane Scholars Program;
Recreation Committee; Sigma Alpha Mu.
GEORGE B KUEHNE, New Orleans, La.; J.Y.A.; Tulane Scholars Program.
BENNY KUPIS, Roselle, N. J.
Seventh Row:
J, LANCE LALOR, Houston, Texas; Sigma Chi.
GERALD DENNIS LANCE, Huntington Beach, Calif.
GERALD LATTER, New Orleans, La.; Tau Beta Pi; Vice-President, Senior Class;
A.S.M.E., Intramural Athletic Manager.
134
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
First Row:
SERGIO A. LEISECA, JR., Bethesda, Md.; Pi Sigma Alplia; Dean's List; Secretary,
Who's Who Committee; Elections Committee; A & S Senator; President, Pi
Kappa Alpha.
JONATHAN LEVIN, New Orleans, La.; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Scholars
and Fellows; A Cappella Choir; Hillel Foundation.
NEIL MARSHAL LEVINE, Miami, Fla.; President, Pre Medical Society; Hillel
Foundation Student Executive Board.
Second Row:
DAVID LIFSHUTZ, San Antonio, Texas; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Phi Eta Sigma;
Tulane Scholars Program; Pre Medical Society.
DAVID C. LONG, New Orleans, La.; Alpha Phi Omega; President, Anchor and
Chain; Sailing Club.
S. L. LOWENSTEIN, JR., Nashville, Tenn.; Vice-President, Phi Eta Sigma; Green-backers;
Sailing Club; Zeta Beta Tau.
Third Row:
BILL LUNCEFORD, Sardis, Miss.; Football; Football Manager.
PAUL C. LYNSKEY, Miami, Fla.
ROBERT M. MAHONY, New Orleans, La.; Delta Kappa Epsilon.
Fourth Row:
RONALD M. MASSEY, Macon, Ga.; Pre Medical Society; Psi Chi.
DAVID MICHAEL MATHES, Orlando, Fla.; Alpha Tau Omega.
CRAIG W. MAUMUS, New Orleans, La.; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Beta Beta Beta;
Eta Sigma Phi; Phi Sigma Alpha; Dean's List; Conservative Club; Newman Club;
Sailing Club; Pre Medical Society.
Fifth Row:
HOWARD M. MAZIAR, Atlanta, Ga.; Psi Chi; Sigma Alpha Mu.
HENRY A. McCartney, New Orleans, La.; Beta Theta Pi.
WILLIAM D. McCLURE, JR., Tulsa, Okla.; Sigma Chi.
Sixth Row:
ALBERT MICHAEL MclLWAIN, Jackson, Miss.; Air Force ROTO; Pi Kappa Alpha.
WILLIAM G. McLAIN, McComb, Miss.; Delta Kappa Epsilon.
JOHN GUTIERREZ McLURE, Alexandria, La.; Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Seventh Row:
WILLIAM A. MEBANE, New Orleans,
FRED R. METZINGER, New Orleans,
MALCOLM A. MEYER, New Orleans,
Phi Eta Sigma; Track Team; Beta Theta Phi.
La.; Pre Medical Society; Sigma Chi.
La.; Varsity Baseball.
La.; Eta Sigma Phi; Omicron Delta Kappa;
135
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
First Row:
WILL CRAIG MEYER, Silver Spring, Md.
RANDOLPH KENT MILLER, Warren, Ohio; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Dean's
List; Tulane Scholars Program; A. U.S.A.; Scabbard and Blade; Army ROTC;
Brigade Commander; Latin American Organization; Soccer Team; Arab Club.
J. RALPH MILLET, JR., Metairie, La.
Second Row:
MICHAEL R. MILLICAN, Houston, Texas; Sigma Nu.
FRED MORGAN, Stone Mountain, Ga.
CARTER MORSE, Seneca Point, Naples, N. Y.; President, A & S Senior Class;
Soccer; Kappa Sigma.
Third Row:
F. SCHOn MUMME, JR., New Orleans, La.; Varsity Football; Art Club; Alpha
Tau Omega,
DAVID MURPHY, Fort Worth, Texas.
DOUGLAS S. MYERS, Norfolk, Va.; Sports Editor, JAMBALAYA; HULLABALOO;
Publicity Committee; Zeta Beta Tau.
Fourth Row:
GUY M. NELSON, III, New Orleans, La.
JONATHAN D. F, NELSON, Miami, Fla.; Hospitalit

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NEW UriLLnfiiJ . . Queen of the Mississippi, cradle of jazz, iiome of ttie Mardi
Gras, ttie Quarter, Bourbon Street, the Garden District and Tulane. The city has a magic
charm for the'^newcomer. But the wonder of the tourist wears off quicldy and you never
go to Bourbon ^reet except to play guide for parents and friends. A new New Orleans
replaces the fad^ ideals of summer. There are urban slums, traffic problems, and a laugh-able
municipal government. As you leave Tulane, New Orleans has a different meaning. But
no one who has sailed on Lake Ponchartrain or walked a lazy sunset through the oaks in
'Audubon Park can leave without remembering a city with a strong and distinctive character
that, for a brief period in a young life, was home. 5 ;
JSLrrktysLlsLysL
196S
CONTENTS
SPORTS 26
BEAUTY 72
LEADERSHIP 86
CLASSES 116
ORGANIZATIONS 210
GREEKS 250
MILITARY 312
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It would be futile to attempt a description of tlie pe-culiar
and personel collection of architecture, oaks, music
and "wliere y'at" that has come to be called New Orleans.
It's not so much a place as a state of mind, and each man
has his own opinion, an opinion certain to be different from
any other. We can only recall a few of the images that
contribute to this potpouri with the understanding that you
know the city better than anyone else.
There is the New Orleans of azaleas, streetcars, and
the Garden District. This is the city most immediate to
Tulane. Some say that it is an irrelevant Camelot, a retreat
form reality, avoiding the important issues of the day, de-termined
to be uninvolved with anything more remote than
Napoleon Avenue. Perhaps it is, but every Tulanian knows
the value of a quiet walk through Audubon Park after a
particularly difficult examination; or what it is to ride a
wood-creaking trolley speeding open windowed through an
early spring evening.
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16
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18
19
20
21
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22
23
24
25
26
H YEAR of hope and a year of disappointment, but a
year of interesting and exciting athletic contests at Tulane.
Returning students in September staggered out of
fraternity rush week and orientation into the opening of
the football season with hopes high and a prospective
bowl bid waiting in November. The fans at the Saturday
night games have changed a good deal since Coach Jim
Pittman took over. Where once it was the fashion to use
a football game as an excuse for a floor show and have
a thousand private parties scheduled in the stands from
eight to ten p.m., the average student now cares about
the game, for it is a game worth caring about, not only
for the team but for the university, for the prestige which
surrounds a top football team rubs off on the school, and,
for all the talk about the national reputation of Tulane,
our prestige in sports circles is only fair, at best. This
past year, disappointing losses to several weaker teams
forced the Tulane fan to look forward to basketball which
promised to be a real success after last year's 14-10 record.
As was the story with football, the basketball team was
overrated, suffered disappointing early losses and when
Coach Ralph Pederson was replaced by Tom Nissaike in
mid-season because of illness, a six-game losing streak
greeted the frosh mentor before the team settled down
and won seven of their last ten.
Seeming to follow the lead of the two major teams,
most of the other varsity squads attained a high level of
mediocrity, which, at this university anyway, is a distinct
improvement over the recent teams in the minor SDOrtS.
The baseball team had its problems with a new coach
and the loss of valuable veterans, but gave a creditable
performance as they wait for this year's freshman and
sophomores to develop. The track, golf and swimming teams
did not set the world on fire, although several individuals
came through with excellent performances so that the Green
Wave was not humiliated in any instance.
The tennis team still possessed one of the strongest
dual meet squads in the country, having an undefeated
season, and when tournament time came around, they man-aged
to hold on to ninth place in the country despite
disappointing losses in several championship matches.
Individually, several outstanding stars have recently
been developed at Tulane. First among them is of course
Bobby Duhon, who was chosen as a pre-season Ail-American
and, after completing a recordbreaking career at Tulane,
signed with the New York Football Giants, who chose him
in the third round of the draft.
In tennis, Turner Howard in singles and Lee Kantrow
and Richard Carter in doubles were fighting for national
championships last spring and Howard looks like a good
bet to capture a major title before leaving Tulane.
Of the several Tulane baseball players signing con-tracts
over the last two years, there is one who just might
make the major leagues this summer. That is Bobby Darrah
with the Yankees. This year Bobby is with Syracuse in the
AAA International League and could be brought up towards
the end of the season.
So there is hope. With the development of the young
players and the help of the veterans, it seems that a
winning tradition will reappear at Tulane, a tradition which
should have reappeared this past year.
27
28
VARSITY SPORTS
FOOTBALL
29
30
VARSITY SPORTS
FOOTBALL
31
VARSITY FOOTBALL
MIAMI (OHIO) AND NORTH CAROLINA
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Above: Wingback Jimmy Trahan (29) runs over Miami's Darr Gerliardt on his
way to a three yard picl!i4.'i--'uj;i'>-
.
:.'t::3*r!'v3i;>. -^'JJ-^-w
Freshman Football Team, First Row: Coach Jerry Colquette, Coach Don Capretz, Gordon Roy, Bryan
Duck, David Richard, Lowell Schexnayder, Ken Sanders, Joe Gendron, Rodney Bazar, Roger Schramm,
Head Freshman Coach Jack O'Leary; Second Row: IVIanager Dean Taylor, Ricky Kingrea, Jack LaBorde,
Ray Hester, Duke Chappius, John Autenreith, Francis Daigle, Tom Caucio, Sam Scelfo, Randy Albers;
Third Row: Mack Michael, Carl Tatum, Bruce Jackson, Harold Sisk, Steve Spomer, Mike Walker, Chip
DeWitt, Lonnie Sibley; Fourth Row: John Charles, Earl Robinson, Brian Robinson, Jack Bedwell, Paul
Shirley, Jim Shepard, Steve Stark, Mike Farnell, Gerald Boudreaux; Fifth Row: Bob Hendon, Don
Fortier, Albert Low, Johnny, Gill, Jimmy White, Butch Spencer, Jim Koontz.
51
Right: Terry Habig (43) driving against Rich Hickman (24) of L.S.U. at
Baton Rouge; Bottom: A capacity crowd of over 5,000 fills Tulane Gym as
Pistol Pete Maravich leads L.S.U. against the Wave in January; Opposite,
top: Johnny Arthurs (31) and Dennis Riddle (35) sweep the boards at Baton
Rouge in the second L.S.U. game; Opposite, bottom: Bob Spurck (45) gets
a pass off to Joel Miller (23) over L.S.U.'s Rich Lupcho at Baton Rouge.
52
Continuing their strong finish from last season, Coach
Ralph Pedersen's Green Wave opened the season with an easy
victory over Southwestern at Memphis by a score of 95-72. Cap-tain
Dan Moeser led both teams with 16 points, followed by
Johnny Arthurs with 13. Three days later, the Wave cagers
extended their winning streak, including the last five games
of the 1966-67 season, to seven by defeating Florida Southern,
104-72.
The Tulane hoopsters ran into trouble on the first road
trip of the year, foreshadowing their season-long frustration
on the road, losing to Baylor and Rice. Erratic floor play and
poor shooting hampered the Wave effort In the Baylor contest,
which they lost 93-82. Moeser was high scorer for Tulane for
the third consecutive game. The Wave again couldn't roll against
Rice, and lost to the Owls 88-81. Arthurs led the Tulane scoring
with 19 points, followed by Moeser and Bob Spurck, with 16
apiece. The following Saturday, at home again, the Greenies lost
to Purdue and their highly-touted sophomore. Rick Mount, 107-92.
Two days later, Tulane broke its three-game losing streak
by nipping Denver, 85-83, In a game that was even closer than
the score indicates. Dan Moeser, coming out of a sick-bed, led
the Wave with 27 points. Next, the Wave won the opening game
of the Mobile Classic tournament, downing Spring Hill 90-86. In
the championship game, the Wave bowed to Alabama, 90-83.
Terry Habig was selected for the All-Tournament team.
Shortly after the Mobile Classic, Coach Pedersen suffered
a mild coronary spasm and was forced to relinquish his position
for the remainder of the season. The team effort was hampered
by Injuries to Fitzgerald and Spurck and It took five more games
for the Wave to play winning basketball again. Georgia Tech,
led by Phil Wagner's 36 points, started the slide by dropping
the Wave 100-81 In Atlanta. Tulane then played L.S.U. at home
before a standing-room only crowd, and the Tigers, led by the
magical ball-handling and 52 point scoring output of super-sopho-more
Pete Maravlch, broke open a tight game In the last minutes
and defeated the Greenies 100-91.
VARSITY SPORTS
BASKETBALL
53
VARSITY SPORTS
BASKETBALL
VN THE road again, the Wave was upset twice: first by Kent
State, 93-73, and then by Pittsburgh, 75-73. Poor floor play hurt
the Greenies in both games and the effort was cramped by
some highly questionable refereeing. Continuing the loss streak,
the cagers dropped a 98-81 battle to Missouri.
The next night, however, the Wave put all the pieces to-gether
and upset the taller, heavier Miami Hurricanes, 99-88.
Twenty points by Johnny Arthurs and spirited hustle by reserve
guard Drew Madar sparked the Tulane victory. The Greenie hoop-stes
dropped another road tilt, this one by an 83-76 count to
Louisiana College in Pineville, and then racked up a season-high
109-81 victory over the Air Force Academy. Arthurs' 31 points
led the way in the Tulane victory. The Wave next traveled to
New York to play N.Y.U. and in the first college double header
ever played in the new Madison Square Garden, the Greenies
whipped the Violets 71-60. Tulane only hit on 36% of its shots
but they held star Violet guard Jim Miller to 10 points to pave
the way to victory. The Greenies next stretched the win streak
to three by defeating Chicago, 89-53. Terry Habig paced the
attack with 21 points.
The cagers then traveled to Baton Rouge, where Pistol
Pete Maravich, the nation's leading scorer, and some poor
refereeing were again too much to handle. Maravich this time
scored 55 points and the final score was 99-92, L.S.U. The Wave
met Davidson next and played one of their best games of the
year, although in a losing cause, bowing to the Southern Con-ference
Champions, 76-68., The cagers bounced back against
Stetson, dropping the Hatters, 80-66. This was the Wave's final
away game of the season, and only their third win on the road,
compared to nine losses.
The Greenie cage team went into the last two games of
the year needing victories over Virginia Tech and Georgia Tech
for a 12-12 season, and in two exciting contests, accomplished
just that. In the rematch against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets,
Tulane scored 11 straight points in the final two minutes of
play to win going away, 88-77. Arthurs with 21, Billy Fitzgerald
with 20, and Terry Habig and Drew Madar with 13 apiece pro-vided
the offensive thrust. In the season's finale, Johnny Arthurs'
25 points led the Wave to a comeback 88-78 victory over Vir-ginia
Tech. Arthurs finished the season with a 19.4 scoring
average, the fifth highest in Tulane history.
: =K^ v- C^~ ^-^ii^^^^
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54
Top: Madar (5), Moeser (24), and Miller (23); Above: Tom Nissaike, who assumed head
coach duties in mid-season after illness sidelined Ralph Pedersen; Left: Freshman
guard Mike Billingsley (21); Opposite, left: Terry Habig (43), Wave guard surrounded in
the L.S.U. game by Tiger Randy Lamont and Tulane center Dennis Riddle; Opposite,
below: Freshman Tim Hummel (33) driving In for a layup against the Baby Bengals.
55
VARSITY SPORTS
BASKETBALL
56
Opposite: Varsity Basketball Team; first row: Terry Habig, Joel Miller, Bob Spurck,
Drew Madar, Ned Reese; middle row: Assistant Coach Tom Nissaike, Bill Fitzgerald,
Al Kralovansky, Rick Carlson, Johnny Arthurs, Head Coach Ralph Pedersen; back row:
IVlanager Steve Sullivan, Dan Moeser, Don Simmons, Greg Robers, Dennis Riddle, Mitch
Urbanski. Above: Freshman squad: Rusty Palmer, Tim Hummel, Stan KwiatowskI,
George Ferguson, Warren Aldridge, John Sutter, Stan Innes, Harold Sylvester, Mike
Billingsley, Mike Henry, Manager Robert Garland.
57
#A-I
ULANE teams seem to have a knack for getting themselves
overrated, and it was this factor that disappointed a great many
fans of the baseball team last year. None, to be sure, were
more disppointed than first year coach Milt Retif, who had to
face the problem of keeping up the strong baseball tradition
that Tulane has had. The year before he arrived, Tulane was
at a high, with a 17-7 season and several SRO crowds. In 1967,
the team finished with eight wins and 12 losses. Excuses of-fered
were an inconsistency of hitting (.220), teamwork, and
pitching (ERA 5.40). There is not too much left.
The attitude of both coach and players for the 1968 season
is highly optimistic, and it seems that the team has settled
down with the thought of playing some good ball. On the prac-tice
field, a bit of clowning adds to the high spirit, work and
love for the game that might make this year a winning one.
Strong hitting from Ronnie Scott (3b), Billy Fitzgerald (c), Wayne
Francingues (ss) and Steve Martin (cf) should help the team
score, and field play by Johnny Dalton (2b), Johnny Arthurs (lb),
Toby Walcott (rf), John Shay (If) and Ned Reese will highlight
a strong defense. The major problem not only for Tulane but
most other teams is the pitching staff. The top Tulane pitcher
is Don Simpson, and he is backed by Dave Andignac, Bobby
Thomas and Steve Walton. Coach Retlif says the team's success
rides on how these men come through, and, as of now, it is
hard to say. Outstanding freshmen are infielders Marty Donovan
and pitchers Steve Walton and Bobby Thomas.
The schedule that Tulane plays is comparable to any major
school. Such opponents as NCAA champion Illinois State. World
Series Champ Auburn, Kansas State and Spring Hill should more
than prove the team's ability. The highpoint of the season is
usually the games against ever-present rival LSU.
The future for baseball seems to be on an upswing as
compared with the past season. Coach Retif is satisfied with
the new school support which includes a rise in budget and
improvement of the practice field. Another bright spot is the
increased scouting programs that the staff has been able to
carry out. They are making contacts with high school players
earlier in their careers to insure sufficient talent for future
teams. With the first season of night games at home, at-tendance
should equal that of three years ago. The problems
that the program faces lie mostly in a lack of student promo-tion.
The crowds that the team did draw last year were rowdy
and disrespectful of the player's abilities. Coach Retif feels
that support is helpful to the team's already high morale, and
that, with help, this season should prove exciting and well worth
watching.
58
VARSITY SPORTS
BASEBALL
Below: Varsity Baseball Team; front row: Leo Fox, Ward Purdum, Jerry
Mercier, Ronnie Scott, Wayne Francinques, John Kirchner, Jim Barton,
David Andignac; middle row: Marty Donovan, Steve Martin, Ernie Demma,
John Dalton, Lee Martiny, Bobby Thomas, Steve Walton, Don Simpson,
Manager Peter Bock; back row: Coach Milt Retif, Chip Sanches, Bill Fitz-gerald,
Johnny Arthurs, Toby Walcott, George Ditta, Steve Kramer, Ned
Reese, John Shay.
59
VARSITY SPORTS
TRACK
Below: Tulane Track Team; Rob Kelly, John Dommerich, Pat Glynn, Barry
Wax, Gary Groff, Stormy Boudreaux, Earl Levith, Erwin Mendelkern, Richard
Rogers, Mark Morley, Joe Brown, Gene Tomlin, Scott Sanders, Coach John
Oelkers, Bobby Manard, Bob Brown, Richard Baumann, Paul McGee, Malcolm
Meyer.
60
I N THE 1967 track season the thinclads of Tulane broke four
school marks and established numerous meet and relay records.
Led by Gary Groff, Lionel Boudreaux, Paul Arsuaga, Dick
Rogers, Barry Wax, Bob Brown and Malcolm Meyer, the team
faired well throughout the season.
In the first meet of the year, the annual "W" Club indoor
meet, John Oelkers' cindermen took two first places; in the
two-mile relay, the team of Meyer, Rogers, Brown and Arsuaga
took first and Groff set a new meet record in the broad jump
with a leap of 24 feet, UVa inches.
Although the Wave finished sixth overall in the University
of Houston meet, they took three second places and made a
good showing. Lack of depth in many events prevented their
placing higher.
The next week the thinclads played host at the annual
Tulane Invitational meet. On their home track they picked up
four first places; Arsuaga in the mile, David Barr in the two-mile
event, Barry Wax in the discus, and Groff in the long jump.
In the Southwestern Relays which followed this meet, the two-mile
relay team of Arsuaga, Brown, Meyer, and Rogers racked
up a first place.
The final meet of the year saw Tulane facing L.S.U., Mis-sissippi
State and U.S.L., three traditionally strong track teams.
The Wave took a first in only one event, but placed in many
others.
61
VARSITY SPORTS
TENNIS
Right: Freshman Johnny Williams playing a ladder match to determine his
position in the rough matches of the spring season. Below: Coach Emmet
Pare, Gordy Weil, Gordon Traylor, Mike Anderson, Turner Howard, Pierce
Kelley, Johnny Williams, Bill Dubin. Opposite, top left: Junior ace Turner
Howard looks forward to many victories and possibly a major championship
before playing on the summer circuit. Opposite, top right: Veteran Pierce
Kelley warms up for his important role as Coach Pare's number two man.
Opposite, below: Coach Pare gives improving Bill Dubin advice? consola-tion?
aggravation?
62
HLTHOUGH the tennis team takes second stage to the major
sports on campus, it is able to boast a better record than any
of them. Tulane is traditionally on the top in NCAA competi-tion
despite the limited number of scholarships that the school
permits. Coach Emmet Pare still complains that he is hampered
by the fact that he can only offer about one and one-half scholar-ships
each year, but this problem does not seem to affect the
team's success. Last year, the team completed the season un-defeated,
and has lost only two of the starters from that six,
Lee Kantrow and Richard Carter.
The coach's perennial skepticism appears again this year,
but, as usual, it is largely unwarranted. With Turner Howard,
the number one man on last year's squad, returning, this season
should be as good as many before it, including several SEC
and NCAA championships. Ranked number one and two on the
1968 outfit are Howard and Gordon Traylor; backing them up
are veterans Pierce Kelley^ Mike Anderson and Bill Dubin.
The team opens its season with Big Ten champ Michigan
State. Also on the schedule are Rice, the top rated team in the
nation, Texas, Oklahoma and Georgia Tech. They plan to attend
the first Tennessee Invitational Tournament held in the new
coliseum in Knoxville along with Florida State, Tennessee and
Southern Illinois, all of which have large tennis programs.
A player who is granted a scholarship on the Tulane team
must have already proved his ability in high school and age-group
competition. The time he spends under Coach Pare deals
with perfecting every aspect of his game. There is very little
chance for someone to make the team by trying out, and most
of the players on the squad are recruited from the top rank in
their states.
63
64
U NDER Coach Innes Millar and Ralph Pedersen, the prospects
for this year's golf team are no better than the 1967 edition
which finished the year with an ignominious 1-9 record. The
main hope lies with the three returning lettermen, Jim iVlarl^el,
IVlac Miller and Frank Wells. Backing them up will be Junior
Joel Miller, sophomores Andy Milberg, Steve Sullivan and Jim
Lum, and freshman Maury Picheloup.
Coach Millar has high hopes for a winning season this year
after tying the University of South Alabama at Tuscaloosa and
whipping Spring Hill of Mobile. But the remainder of the schedule
calls for outstanding play as upcoming matches include such
teams as 1967 N.C.A.A. Champion Houston, Southern Illinois,
Minnesota, L.S.U., Northern Illinois, Illinois State and Southern
Mississippi. And finally, there is the LS.U. invitational at Baton
Rouge where last year Tulane finished 17th out of 19 teams.
So it seems that this is once again a building year for
the golf team as Coach Millar waits for the six younger
players to develop while the three older boys try to keep the
Green Wave on the edge of respectability.
VARSITY SPORTS
GOLF
Below: Tulane Golf Team; Frank Wells, Jim Markel, Steve Sullivan, Mac Miller, Coach
Innes Millar, Andy Milberg, and Maury Picheloup. Missing: Coach Ralph Pedersen,
Joel Miller.
65
VARSITY SPORTS
SWIMMING
Below: Tulane Varsity Swim Team; Charlie Carson, manager; Pete Levine, Charlie
Johnson, John Rouquette, Bruce McKeever, David Bercuson, Bob Bresnahan, Doug
Williams, Coach Paul Clifford. Seated: left, Mike Goldstein, winner of the Lowell
Damont Award; right, Don Kearns, Captain and Most Valuable Swimmer.
I HE Tulane Swim Team finished with an unimpressive 3-9
record for the 1968 season, but this most definitely does not
reflect their true power. Rookie coach Paul Clifford was able
to push these tankers to two ego-boosting victories over arch
rival L.S.U.
This apparent lack of depth was hardly noticed in the record
books, though, as three new names were written into posterity.
Don Kearns is the new 200 yard champ, while John Rouquette
broke the old 200 yard backstroke record. Bob Bresnahan
reached his peak in the grueling 1,000 yard freestyle.
The 1969 edition of the team should prove to be a little
stronger as there were only three graduating seniors on the
entire team: co-captains Mike "Tunafish" Goldstein and Don
Kearns, and Dave Bercusson. Co-captains Goldstein and Kearns
ended the season in a blaze of glory as they both took three
first places in the last meet. Returning letterman for 1969 in-clude
record holder Bob Bresnahan and John Rouquette, and
also Charlie Johnson, Buck McKever, Doug Williams, Frank Lom-bardo,
and Pete Levine.
The Greenies were particularly proud of their two wins
over the L.S.U. Tigers. The scores were an impressive 85-13
and 68-23. The team won its third and final victory at the ex-pense
of the University of the South.
A contributing factor in the team's nine meet losses was
that six of their opponents were ranked among the top twenty
tank teams in the nation, an honor not shared by the Greenies.
"ffTI
66
67
FOOTBALL
Won 3, Lost
TU
3 Miami of Ohio
36 North Carolina
14 Miami of Florida
Florida
10 Air Force
23 Georgia Tech
27 Vanderbilt
14 Tennessee
10 Virginia
27 LS.U.
14
11
34
35
13
12
14
35
14
41
BASKETBALL
Won 12, Lost 12
TU
95 Southwestern 72
104 Florida Southern 72
82 Baylor 93
81 Rice 88
92 Purdue 107
85 Denver 83
97 Dartmouth 76
90 Spring Hill 86
83 Alabama 90
81 Georgia Tech 100
91 LS.U. 100
73 Kent State 93
73 Pittsburgh 75
81 Missouri 98
99 Miami of Florida 88
76 Louisiana College 83
109 Air Force 81
71 N.Y.U. 60
89 Chicago 53
92 LS.U. 99
68 Davidson 76
80 Stetson 66
88 Georgia Tech 77
88 Virginia Tech 78
BASEBALL
Won 8, Lost 12
(1967 Season
TU
1 Southern Illinois 3
5 Southern Illinois 9
8 Northern Illinois 2
6 Northern Illinois 5
7 Florida 8
1 Florida 4
6 Florida State 10
1 Florida State 5
9 MacMurray 6
2 Missouri 1
1 Missouri 5
10 Missouri 3
5 St. Bernard 4
6 St. Bernard 8
S. E. Louisiana 1
5 Florida State 8
5 Florida State 7
8 LS.U.
LS.U. 9
12 S. E. Louisiana 7
68
SWIMMING
Won 3, Lost 9
TU
55 Evansville 58
39 East Carolina 74
40 Cincinnati 73
21 S.M.U. 90
54 Georgia Tech 59
37 South Florida 76
49 Florida 63
51 Florida State 60
81 L.S.U. 14
78 Sewanee 33
45 Alabama 71
71 L.S.U. 23
TENNIS
Won 8, Lost
(1967 Season)
TU
7 Tennessee 2
6 Rice
8 Illinois 1
5 Mississippi State 3
8 N.O. Lawn Tennis Club 1
6 Texas
6 Georgia Tech 3
8 L.S.U. 1
1968 Schedule
Michigan State March 20
Oklahoma March 26
Texas April 4
Rice April 5
Arkansas April
Georgia Tech April 20
L.S.U. April 27
Tennessee Tournament May 3
TRACK
1968 Schedule
Tulane Invitational March 9
N.C.A.A. Indoor Meet March 15
McNeese State Invitational March 23
Florida Relays March 30
Texas Relays April 5
Southwestern Relays April 13
Northwestern Relays April 20
Civitan Relays
Mobile Chamber of Commerce Meet
Penn Relays April 26
LS.U. and Mississippi State May 11
GOLF
Won 1, Lost 9
(1967 Season)
TU
7 Nicholas State 11
141/2 Western Illinois 121/2
111/2 Southern Illinois 151/2
71/2 South Alabama 101/2
8 Auburn 10
5 Southern Mississippi 22
8 Southern Mississippi 19
13 Nicholas State 14
11 LS.U. 16
31/2 LS.U. 231/2
69
VARSITY SPORTS
SCORES
HUGBY was brought to the Tulane campus in the spring of
1967 by a tiandfu! of medical students who had played the
sport during their undergraduate days at eastern universities.
With the help of a former South African rugby player, the team
picked up several more players and experience. After a few
weeks of practice to allow the team to become acquainted,
the group played a team from the Houston area. They lost this
initial encounter but came back this year to win three in a
row and participate in the First Annual Rugby Tournament in
Hammond, Louisiana, during Mardi Gras.
Rugby is a brutal sport, but it is equally rewarding. After
each practice and each game, the team meets at Eddie Price's
to drink beer and discuss future opponents. The beer busts
seem to draw most of the Tulane players.
This past season was a highly successful one for Coach
Ernesto Bonilla's soccer team as they compiled a 6-3-1 record.
The team was strong offensively, being led by Captain Fred King,
co-captain Ali Sahli, Paul Sills, and Steve Ackerman. As strong
as the offense was, the defense matched them with King drop-ping
back from his halfback position, Santiago Vilela, and goalies
Randy Miller and Chris Green.
This season the team counted victories over LSUNO (twice),
Keesler Air Force Base, Delgado Institute, Elgin Air Base, and
the HMSC Bonaventure (which thus gained the distinction of
being the only ship to lose to Tulane in both soccer and rugby).
The defeats came at the hand of Keesler, Mississippi Southern,
and LSD. Following the regular season, the team will continue
playing by scheduling exhibitions with incoming French, British
and Canadian ships.
General supervision of the intramural sports calendar is the
function of the Intramural Athletic Council with coach Ben Abadie
serving as advisor.
.-*-Wi^*iW'i *>. 1* ^s*--;j-
RUGBY SCORES
Southeast Louisiana
Southeast Louisiana
Southeast Louisiana
Kansas City Blackhawks
Washington, D.C.
H.M.C.S. Bonaventure
TU
— 8
0-11
6-9
3-0
8-6
3 - 5
70
INTRAMURAL SPORTS
71
Beauties
73
Miss Pauline Tulane
J Laurie Fuge
74
75
MAID OF HONOR Ann Mcllhenny
4
76
Barbara Edm
77
Annette Grossman
78
Jane Mundt
79
Marilyn Thomas
so
Nancy Wendel
81
82
HOMECOMING QUEEN
MISS GAY YELLEN
83
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45
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84
BEAUTY
HOMECOMING COURT
Clockwise, opposite, left: Miss Pam Breen; Miss Emily Clark; Miss Jean
Cooper, Maid of Honor; Miss Kitty Clark; Miss Meg Burns; Miss Sue Todd.
86
I HIS year demanded more leadership ability from all areas
of the university than any other in the history of Tulane. Dr.
Longenecker was outstanding for his patience, apparent under-standing,
and smooth, albiet general statements at a time of
student-administration confrontation. The leadership of the stu-dent
body was probably most conspicuous for the peculiar way
in which it dealt with uncomfortable circumstances. The stand-ard
operating procedure, as it eventually evolved, was to resign.
This strange phenomenon was not limited to the student body,
however. It was in fact initiated by none other than that "dis-tinguished
publisher and noted author," Nodding Carter. In the
flurry of resignations that followed Mr. Carter's unprecedented
action, precipitated by the publication of allegedly obscene pas-sages
in the student paper, it is hard to determine who was the
first student to actually resign his position. Most sources point
to Jeff Howie for this signal honor. But no matter, the trend
was set. It became sort of in to be out, a camp thing, and
everybody was doing it. Hank Harnage, erstwhile Messiah to
the student senate and prophet of student power, liberalized
liquor laws, and N.S.A., resigned perfunctorily after the failure
of the N.S.A. referendum in a manner vaguely reminiscent of
Socrates' gurgle of hemlock, if you will cast your minds back.
At this point, it seemed that the student body might be
spared further dramatics on the part of the proper politicians.
But lo! As the controversy over the publication of the now
famous Sophia photographs bubbled and churned, the acting
president of the senate, Larry Rosenblum, disappeared. With
Andy Schwartz (the next in line of succession) claiming to be
able to hold out no longer than six hours in this demanding
position, the entire student body waited in horror with images
of "Jane Rush—President" running through bewildered minds,
minds now steeled to accept even Snoopy or Dorothy Ricutti
as legitimate successors. But Larry came back.
LSfldBrShip ^^^ ^^^ subject of much debate during
the controversy. In^he end, the week of demonstrations which
accompanied serious discussions about the position of the stu-dent
body vis-a-vis the administration and the appropriate place
for "censorship" on the campus brought to fore some of the
best qualities of our legitimate representatives, notably Larry
Rosenblum and his conduct at the mass meeting Friday of that
week.
At times during the week, however, "leadership" took on
quite a different meaning. It became apparent that the term
was being defined roughly as "that quality attributed to one
who yells loudest and most persistently, while advocating start-ling
and inventive proposals with which to occupy the otherwise
idle minds of the uninterested listeners and lookers-on." Notable
were Jim Porter and Elliot Levin. The image of Porter leading
cheers down McAlister Drive makes it difficult to believe that
the people following were actually mature, discriminating Tulane
students. One almost expected a procession of floats and barges
to follow with flaming coconuts and plastic beads being tossed
about with reckless abandon. In the heat of the Tuesday night
sit-in in the U.C., Levin went so far as to say that his four
years at Tulane had been of no value to him whatsoever, a
statement which was taken by his audience to be painfully
obvious.
The carnival atmosphere did not obscure the fact that Tulane
students were actively concerned about an issue of general inter-est
to the student body, and this was far more important than
the specific questions of the photographs.
87
Above: Tulane Board of Administrators: Seated, Mr. Jacob Landry, IVIr.
Josepli McClosliey, Mrs. George M. Spellings, Chairman Darwin S. Fenner,
Mr. Clifford Favrot, Mr. Lester J. Lautenschlaeger, .Mr. Gerald Andrus.
Standing, Mr. Harry B. Kelleher, Mr. A. L. Jung, Jr., Mr. Richard W.
Freeman, Mr. Sam Israel, Jr., Mr. Edgar B. Stern, Jr., Mr. Charles Smither,
Mr. Leon Irwin, Jr., Mr. A. Percy Generes. Opposite, Dr. Herbert E.
Longenecker, President. Right, Dr. Clarence Scheps, Executive Vice Presi-dent.
88
UnCE more the Jambalaya presents a rich panorama of a
college year. In the decades to come this book will help you
to live again your college experience and feel the glow of old
friendships.
As a record of the year 1967-68 the Jambalaya is a his-torical
document. It depicts people and scenes as they were
during a certain period in time. Yet history tells not merely
what happened in the past but what has shaped the future.
In 1988 or 1998 or long thereafter you may look on these pages
and recall how your years at Tulane influenced the direction
of your life.
Events of the year have influenced Tulane's future also.
Visible evidences include the completion of the new general
library and the start on construction of a science building,
which will help the University serve many student generations.
Just as important in its potential is a comprehensive selfstudy
that has involved the whole institution, including a student
committee that has contributed valuable observations. From
this study, and other extensive planning activities of the past
year, will come developments that will prepare your University
to meet new and greater challenges.
When you revisit your University—and I hope you will do
so often—you will find some familiar scenes and some that
are new. But the new should never be strange, for adaptation
and growth are normal and necessary. And years from now
when you are identified as a Tulane alumnus your associates
will think of Tulane as it is then, not as it was when you
were here. Keep this book, then, not to induce nostalgia but
to remind you that you and your University are linked through
a hopeful and productive future.
Herbert E. Longenecker
)ERSH!P
BOARD OF ADMINISTRATORS
89
Top left: Robert A. Scruton, Security; left: Donald R. Moore, Housing;
above: Dorothy J. Dale, Newcomb Admissions; Agatha L. Newitt, Cultural
Activities; Edillia S. Kolb, International Office. Opposite, top right: Beatrice
M. Field, Alumni Activities; lower right: Jesse B. Morgan, Business Man-ager;
top left: Mildred B. Barkley, Reservations; lower left: Edward A.
Rogge, Admissions.
90
91
Above: John H. Stibbs, Dean of Students; Right: Dorothy N. Ricciuti, Adviser to
Women; Left: Tom McCay Jr., Associate Dean of Students. Opposite, above left:
Karlem Riess, Adviser to' Fraternities; Right: Einar Pedersen, Director, University
Center; Left: Endicott Batchelder, Director of Student Records.
92
93
LEADERSHIP
STUDENT LIFE
94
Opposite, above: Georgia White and Lynn Sport, Dean of Students Office;
Opposite, lower left: Sliaron Marcum, Budget Secretary; Lower right: Boo
Mason, Adviser to Atliletic Clubs. Below: IVIargaret Noble and Ellen Conlin,
Student Activities Office; Right: Leiand Bennett, Assistant Director, Uni-versity
Center; Below: Samuel McNeely, Jr., Director, International Office.
.=4.
95
LEADERSHIP
STUDENT SENATE
.f^r
wTUDENT government at Tulane has traditionally, and perennially,
been a matter of "much talk, little do": every year candidates have
promised to make student government a meaningful, effective instru-ment
for articulating and implementing students' opinions about the
life of the university, and every year they have either forgotten or
failed to make it such. This year was, to some degree, an exception,
for the results of the 1967-68 Student Senate's work were less
meager than those of most of Tulane's previous student governments.
Of course, there has only been a Student Senate for a couple of
years; previously student "government" was in the hands of a much
smaller and presumably much less representative Student Council.
Key figure in the past year's Senate was President Hank Harnage,
who brought to his post probably greater experience in the workings
of Tulane's often mysterious political processes than any Student
Body President in recent years. Even so, he often found his plans
and proposals frustrated by the opposition or simple indifference
of either the student body, the administration, or the Senate itself.
Accordingly, after only two months in office, Harnage and all the
other members of .the Senate's Executive Cabinet announced they
would resign at the end of the first semester unless major progress
was made in revitalizing both the power and the spirit of the Senate.
Some minor progress was apparently made during the following
weeks, but the key issue finally turned out to be the results of
a student body referendum concerning whether or not Tulane should
join the National Student Association.
96
Opposite, above right: Hank Harnage, President of the Student Senate, resigned
after the failure of the N.S.A. referendum. Opposite, below left: Larry Rosenblum,
Vice-President for Finance, became President of the Student Senate after IVlr.
Harnage's resignation. Above, top: The Executive Cabinet, before resignation fever
decimated it, included (from left) Gary Barker, Chairman of CACTUS; Andy
Schwartz, Vice-President for Administration; Hank Harnage, President; Jane
Rush, Secretary; Larry Rosenblum, Vice-President for Finance; and Jeff Yudin,
President of the Tulane University Center Board. Above: A meeting of the Student
Senate, here showing some of the senators.
97
Tulane had been a member of the liberal and progressive na-tional
student group in 1965-66, but a referendum in the spring of
the latter year had ended the affiliation. Harnage had attended the
N.S.A. national convention during the summer of 1967, and it was
there that he acquired the inspiration to promote the "student power"
theme that became a rallying cry throughout the year. However,
despite the 1967 revelation that it had been receiving C.I.A. financing
for a decade, the N.S.A. positions on civil rights, international issues,
and the policy of issuing statements that often did not represent
the views of many N.S.A. members were seemingly too much for
the majority of Tulane voters to swallow, and the proposed re-affiliation
was defeated 970-615.
The night the referendum results were disclosed, Harnage an-nounced
his resignation as Student Body President. None of the
other Senate officers decided to follow his lead, however, and the
Vice-President for Finance Larry Rosenblum assumed, more or less,
Harnage's duties. But neither Rosenblum nor Vice-President for Ad-ministration
Andy Schwartz ever really caught Harnage's dream of
a meaningful student govenment, and neither of them was ever
willing to put into their jobs the time and devotion that Harnage had.
It was ironic, then, that the year's major manifestation of "stu-dent
power,"—a week of protest marches, mass meetings, picketing
and petitions over alleged censorship of the Hullabaloo—came after
Harnage's departure from office and thus was under Rosenblum's
titular leadership. But most observers agreed that it had been Har-nage's
presidency that had prepared the way for the totally unex-pected,
totally un-Tulanian phenomen.on of a near-revolt by students.
In fact, most students seemed as stunned that the long-decried
student "apathy" had been shattered as did the university's adminis-tration.
Whether the new-found student consciousness and concern
would continue, no one could foretell.
Otherwise, the Student Senate did manage to pass a few important
bills during the year, sometimes in conjunction with other units
of that nebulous creature, "student government," such as men's
and girls' residence associations. And throughout the year the Senate
leaders found unexpected support for many of their plans and goals
from the faculty-student University Senate Committee on Student
Affairs, and especially from its chairman, Professor Stephen Zeff of
the Graduate School of Business Administration. (Another develop-ment
of the year was the addition of students to several more com-mittees
of the University Senate on which they had previously not
been represented—a possible harbinger of things to come.)
Among the actions which the Senate took during the year were
recognition of the Students for a Democratic Society as an official
student organization, despite fears that the radical group might dis-rupt
the university's normal processes and damage its "good name",
calls for boycotts of various local restaurants alleged to be dis-criminating
against Negro students; passage of a "student judiciary"
plan, still unapproved by the faculty and administration at the year's
end, to increase students' power in conduct and disciplinary cases;
approval of a student referendum making purchase of a copy of the
Jambalaya mandatory for all undergraduates; endorsement of a plan
to significantly expand the women's visiting hours in the men's
dormitories; and approval of a proposal to allow students to keep
liquor in their rooms.
In short, it was more a productive year than most in the past,
certainly (with the March demonstrations) a more exciting and color-ful
year. Yet the complaints that student government did not really
represent its constituents continued, and this failure of most stu-dents
to take the Senate and other governmental organs seriously,
together with the failure of many senators and even Senate officers
to take their duties and responsibilities seriously, represented con-tinued
threats to the possibility of establishing an effective and
meaningful student government at Tulane.
98
Opposite, above: Hank Harnage hands
the gavel to new Student Senate
President Larry Rosenblum following
his resignation announcement. Above:
President Rosenblum conducts the
Student Senate meeting in the snack
bar of the University Center during
the week of demonstrations following
the Sophia photographs' controversy.
Left: Tulane University President Lon-genecker
addresses students in his
"State of the University" speech
which was held March 13, after "the
week" during which the student body
had requested that Dr. Longenecker
address them.
99
LEADERSHIP
NEWCOMB STUDENT GOVERNMENT
UURISDICTION over student affairs at Newcomb College is
theoretically vested in the Newcomb Student Government. How-ever,
in dealing with questions of specific concern to Newcomb,
the government's effectiveness is severely hampered by a lack
of interest on the part of the student and cooperation on the
part of the administration, according to .the president of the
Newcomb student body, Sylvia Dreyfus, "This year we emerged
as an appropriate reflection of Tulane's era of apathy. The stu-dent
government embarked on a special lecture series to appeal
to students via contemporary issues, but there was no response.
Neither poetry nor prejudice solved the problem, suggesting
that nothing can.
"The one ironic question that arose after a year of disinterest
was one of Newcomb's autonomy. During this time of serious
world problems, the student senate tackled programs of com-munity
action. But Newcomb's students continued to view a
narrow world, unable to comprehend the complexities of life,
and the higher aspirations of student leaders went once again
unrecognized. Certainly we could agree with the forecast that
'Someday there will be a war and no one will come.'
"
This type of frustration is not uncommon among those
dealing with the nebulous responsibility of "governing" a large
and diverse student body. Those who prefer to see the results
of their toil in specific accomplishments may turn to an organ-ization
such as the Newcomb Athletic Council. Representatives
to this body are selected from each area of the student com-munity
for the purpose of supervising athletic competition at
the college. Tournaments are conducted and awards presented
to those groups and individuals judged most outstanding during
the year.
100
Opposite, Above left: President of the Newcomb Stu-dent
Government, Sylvia Dreyfus. Opposite, below:
Executive Cabinet of the Newcomb Student Govern-ment,
Penny Chittim, corresponding secretary; Bunny
Cornell, Recording Secretary; Laurie Ives, Vice-Presi-dent;
Sylvia Dreyfus, President. Above: The Newcomb
Athletic Council, seated, Denise Sucarino, Treasurer;
Mary Clare McEnerny, President; Kathy McHugh, Sec-retary;
standing, C. Blum, C. Boudreaux, C. Woosley,
A. Boyleston, C. Robinson, C. Dyer, S. Waguespack,
D. Dane, B. Fouts, C. Mehlman, L. Gonzales, D. Gustaf-son.
Left: President of the Student Senate, Hank
Harnage, and Sylvia Dreyfus, representing the New-comb
Student Government, at a meeting of the Student
Senate of the Associated Student Body of Tulane.
H)1
LEADERSHIP
HONOR BOARDS
Above: Newcomb Honor Board, begin-ning
at bottom right, C. Dyer, D. Sir,
B. Gordon, iVI. Davis, L. Goldman, N.
Cohen, N. Allison, C. Goldberger, E.
Ross, F. Hays, M. Del Favero, C. Fergu-son,
E. Lewis. Not pictured: S. Dreyfus.
Left: Tulane Honor Board, front rov»:
J. Fisher, H. Koch, W. Alworth, R.
Lumsden; back row: J. Morrill, G.
Ferris, R. Towie, P. Cominos. Not Pic-tured:
R. Knill, G. Briggs, T. Mont-gomery,
J. Roppolo, J. Yudin, S.
Sanger, A. Schwartz, K. Williams.
Opposite, above left: Newcomb Inner
Council, front row: B. Branch, S.
Fleischer, middle row, M. Coleman, S.
Rosenthal, E. Clarke, J. Kemp, C. Dyer.
Back row, M. Del Favero, K. Midkiff,
Midkiff, R. Grossman, C. Goldberger.
Opposite, above right: Inner Council
officers, Sidney Fleischer, Secretary,
and Clem Goldberger, President. Op-posite,
below: Tulane Inter-House
Council, J. Florey, B. Goldring, H.
Keller, C. Johnson, T. Bivins, Presi-dent;
D. Bercuson, J. Wohler, F. Zeis-berg.
Not Pictured: I. Adams, M.
Ringel.
I HE Honor Boards of the Tulane College of Arts and Sciences
and Newcomb College are identical in purpose and in relation-ship
with their Dean, but are quite different in structure. Mem-bers
of the Newcomb Board are elected from the student body
while members of the Tulane Board are appointed by the Dean.
The Tulane board is composed of eight faculty members and
eight students, four of whom are regularly seated on the Board
and four alternates. Each Board hears cases concerning Honor
Code violations and makes their recommendations to the Dean
of their respective schools as to the guilt or innocence of the
charged and what penalty, if any, they feel is necessary.
The Dorm Councils of Newcomb and Tulane, too, are quite
similar although the Newcomb Inner Council appears to be more
administrative than its Tulane counterpart. Conspicuous progress
was made this year, particularly when one considers the tra-ditional
do-nothingness of the councils. A liberalization of rules
for senior women was successfully undertaken this year at New-comb,
the result being a system in which the seniors are al-lowed
to regulate their own hours. Also significant was the
extension of evening curfew for underclassmen, the extent of
which was dependent upon the student's classification.
The Tulane Inter-House council, the top level of men's resi-dence
hall government, was a mover this year also. The Inter-
House Council was the body which took the initial steps in the
successful campaign to gain liberalized dormitory liquor rules.
Another campaign being waged by the council is a proposal for
a radical change in the hours during which female guests are
allowed in men's dorm rooms and the dormitory lounges. This
legislation failed to pass the University Senate, but the door
was left open for consideration of a revised version for which
passage is virtually assured. The Board of Administrator's stand
on the matter when it gets to them, though, is a cause of
concern among supporters of the proposal.
A conclusion to be drawn from these developments is that
the administration and the students involved are trying to make
dormitories competitive with fraternity houses and apartments
as centers for social as well as academic activity. If they suc-ceed
in this, then we are likely to see quite a shakeup of
traditional living patterns, with greater centralization of student
activity on campus, as opposed to the present tendency toward
fractionalization. The university would then become more of a
place to be than a place to visit.
102
LEADERSHIP
DORM COUNCILS
103
LEADERSHIP
TUCP
HFTER years of reorganization, of trimming useless committees
and self-evaluation, the Tulane University Center Program came
up with their best year to date in 1967-68. Tiip quality of the
programs, their frequency, and the support by the students, at
least, points out that TUCP is headed in the right direction.
But that's always been true, so we may interpret the year as
a culmination of the due process of trial and error programming
of the past years and say that TUCP made fewer errors this
year.
The philosophy that produced so many successes this year
as opposed to the few good presentations of the past can be
summed up in one word: professionalism. Everything that was
presented was done with more thought and work than in past
years, with a conscientious effort to appeal to the particular
needs of this university.
Much of the credit for the overall success of the year goes
to the individual committees. This year the committees were
allowed a free hand in carrying out their programs by the Execu-tive
Committee and although the results attest to the effective-ness
of this method it did produce a considerable lack of
cohesiveness, which might not be altogether a bad thing.
Another change that has slowly been taking place in the
TUCP is that an ever widening variety of students are begin-ning
to take part. No longer are the committees so liberally
sprinkled with fraternity and sorority pledges, who are urged
by their peers to get involved in a campus activity, and primarily
the TUCP, which has served as a popular scapegoat. Not to
discredit the Greeks, though, for they have capably carried the
whole program for years, but by diluting the Greek's dominance
the programming can achieve more campus-wide appeal.
An aspect of the TUCP's programming that helped immeasur-ably
in strengthening the overall appeal was its newly discovered
eagerness to mix in controversy to achieve a good program.
Mark Lane, James Farmer, and Dick Gregory were the sparks
for more heated campus discussion than Tulane has seen in
some time. Also, TUCP gained control of the entertainment in
Der Rathskeller which resulted in many S.R.O. nights in the
campus beer hall. In view of the strength of the TUCP, Green-backers,
a spirit organization founded at Tulane in 1935, be-came
a trial member of the program. As an independent organ-ization
it was hard-pressed to compete with the TUCP for
members.
KM
Opposite, above left: Jeff Yudin, President of the University Center Board:
Opposite, below: Officers of the board, Mary Prosser, Secretary, Jan Alexander,
Vice-President-Administration, and Arnold Shelby, Vice-President-Public Relations;
Above: University Center Committee Chairmen; Beth Sampson, Spotlighters; Mike
Ellison, Lagniappes; Kathy Smith, Padohad; Pete Brinkman, Recreation; Ann Hall,
Hospitality; Ed Dubuisson, Lyceum; Sonny V^iegand, Greenbackers; Marilyn
Thomas, Fine Arts; not pictured; K. K. Singh, Cosmopolitan. Above: The Vice
President Administration and Vice-President-Public Relations Staffs; Mildred
Lehmann, VPA, Pat Prins, VPPR, Tamzon Feeney, VPPR, Neil Campbell, VPA,
Denise Sucarino, VPPR: not pictured; Meg Burns, VPA, Bob Sussman, VPPR,
Trisha Glatthaar, VPPR.
105
I HE Recreation committee provides tlie university with a va-riety
of recreational functions aimed at giving every student a
ciiance for participation. Ttie committee is in charge of all pro-gramming
in the the swimming and games areas of the uni-versity
center and uses the facilities for many of its activities.
Some of the year's events included the marathon swim
club, the bicycle beer drinking contest, the Sadie Hawkins day
hayride, the Christmas ski trip to Vail and Montreal, and tourna-ments
in pool, bowling, and ping-pong. Representatives were
selected from participants in the various programs to represent
Tulane at regional games.
Events of the second semester included happenings of such
earth-shaking importance as the pie eating contest, another
hayride, the European plane trip, and a day at the races. The
committee also sponsors the bridge and chess clubs.
Spotlighters serves the Tulane student by attracting top
quality entertainment to the campus. The committee itself han-dles
all the planning, publicity, ticket selling and back stage
operations for its programs. Spotlighters has expanded its opera-tions
this year to include a significant amount of programming
in Der Rathskeller. The activities of the first semester included
a concert by Glenn Yarborough and a program during Christmas
week featuring the Tulanians. Club Vague Verte, a style show,
and a Bridal show were the highlights of the second semester.
Tulane's Der Rathskeller became a stop on the Coffee House
Circuit and enjoyed Raun MacKinnon, Bruce Farwell, and the
Sounds Unlimited. Several exciting student groups made their
debuts this year in the University Center basement. Another
success for Spotlighters was the innovation of Silent Film Nights,
featuring old Charlie Chaplin, Laurel and Hardy, and W. C. Fields
flicks.
The Cosmopolitan committee is designed to promote better
understanding between American and International students. Ttie
committee sponsors a wide assortment of programs aimed at
attracting a large number of participants.
The two biggest programs of the fall semester were the
Fete Internationale and the Christmas Bazaar. An evening of
international entertainment and exotic food was offered to a
capacity audience at the Fete. Gifts from all over the world
attracted many curious persons to the bazaar. Other first semes-ter
programs included two International picnics and India Week.
Spring programs offered many exciting opportunities for
the Tulane student. The committee sponsored a trip to Mexico
during semester break and, later in the spring, a journey to San
Antonio for the Hemisfair. Other activities included instruction
in Latin American dances and a salute to Norway as "country
of the month" in April.
The function of the Fine Arts committee is to provide the
campus with cultural entertainment and activities in the fields
of art, literature, cinema, and music. This year the committee
sponsored art exhibits produced by local talent as well as major
traveling exhibits. "Amah! and the Night Visitors," as produced
by the music and theater departments, was presented during
Christmas week by the Fine Arts committee. The Cine Cum Laude
film series was initiated this year with the showing of Dr. Faustus,
and The Taming of the Shrew. The committee also sponsors
the Fine Arts film series which brings a number of superior
films, strong both in artistic value and social comment, to the
campus.
K)6
Opposite, above left: Glenn Yarborough in concert at McAlister
Auditorium during the fall; Opposite, above rigbt; Hanging of the
Green during Christmas Weel( at Tulane under the direction of
Padohad; Top: Some of the entertainment provided at the Cos-mopolitan
Committee's Fete Internationale; Above: Folksinger
Raun IVlacKinnon, part of the Coffee House Circuit tour, per-forms
in Der Rathskeller; Above, right: Charlie Pyle entertains
at a Lagniappes Committee, -meeting; Rigbt: James Farmer,
sponsored by the Lyceum Committee, is shown conversing with
students in the University Center after his scheduled address.
107
f/AV£ you
fiou&ur VOU
FRESIIMCI
BOYS
MUSI 1 Above, left: Foremost critic of tlie Warren Report, Mark Lane, shown speak-ing
at McAlister Auditorium; Above: Greenbackers' Spirit Hats were the
order of the day for Tulane Freshmen for the 1967 opening game; Left: A
source of much laughter and queasy stomachs was the Recreation Com-mittee's
Bicycle Beer Drinking Race; Below: The Mark Renshaw Trio per-forming
before a typically large audience In Der Rathskeller; Opposite,
above: Banners telling of the bonfire before the game with Virginia;
Opposite, below: A scene from "Amahl and the Night Visitors."
108
TUCP
COMMITTEES
I HE Lyceum Committee, in an effort to stimulate thougtit and
perhaps even action on the Tuiane campus, attempt to present
programs on subjects that involve student interest. This has
been done primarily through the major speakers series which
has included some very intriguing and controversial lecturers.
In addition, Lyceum sponsors student forums for debate
and individual expression of thought. Speakers on specialized
topics are often presented, taking advantage of speaking talent
so readily available from the New Orleans area. During this
past year, Lyceum has sponsored several speakers of national
prominence in an effort to attract more students to its pro-grams.
While this has lessened the number of speakers, the
quality of lectures and the improved student interest attests
to the success of Lyceum's programs.
The Lagnlappes Committee maintains as its goal to provide
the Tuiane student with "a little extra" in the way of social
life. With this goal in mind, they have presented a number of
events this past year, including the annual Homecoming Dance
held at the Municipal Auditorium with Every Mother's Son and
Yesterday's Children, the Freshman Orientation Open House fea-turing
the Olympia Brass Band's delightful brand of New Orleans'
street jazz, and the Freshman Orientation dance complete with
a light show and other attempts at psychedelia.
In the second semester, Lagniappes had the opportunity
to initiate a new university ruling regarding liquor on campus.
At the Campus Lover Dance in February, students were allowed
to bring their own liquor. The dance was successful and the
B. Y. 0. L. ruling embarked with an optimistic beginning. In
the spring, Lagniappes held numerous Friday afternoon TGIF's
helping to promote Spring Fever.
The Hospitality Committee is the official host for the Tuiane
University Center Program. In order to make campus guests
and visitors feel welcome and at ease, the committee provides
receptions and tours of the campus. For members of the uni-versity,
the committee sponsors occasional coffee nights, and
for the children of students, staff, and faculty members, gives
an annual Christmas party. A travel -map, placed by the Hospi-tality
Committee, hangs in the University Center and aids stu-dents
in finding transportation for the holidays.
Padohad is the segment at the University Center Program
that is responsible for the advertising of events of the other
committees. In advertising these events the committee was
able to produce some splendid banners. Also significant was
the return to the traditional "Hanging of the Green" in which
real greenery was displayed in the University Center. Padohad
also took on the function of policing the U. C. to see that
old posters and advertisements did not clutter the building.
Greenbackers, one of the oldest organizations on campus,
is the spirit club of Tuiane. Originally an independent organiza-tion,
Greenbackers recently affiliated with the University Center
Program. This past year, Greenbackers has helped sponsor bon-fires,
team send-offs, and spirit dances. Other events have
been a lecture by Coach Pittman and the Tulane-L.S.U. football
game film. Greenbackers awards plaques to all the senior
basketball players and, in addition makes posters and banners
publicizing all athletic -contests. A notable addition this year
to the Greenbackers' spirit was a twelve-foot Green Wave ac-quired
for display at games.
109
HONOR
SOCIETIES
111
PHI BETA KAPPA
David W. Arehart
Bruce H. Baguley
Jacalyn I. Blye
George B. Brown
Barbara D. Cantella
Cheryl L. Champeau
Elizabeth D. Clark
Judith A. Fife
Walda K. Fishman
John M. Fitch
Reuben L Friedman
Janina R. Caller
Clem Goldberger
Charles E. Gow
Bruce E. Guidry
Carol J. Hermann
Janet L Hockert
David R. Johnson
Douglas G. Kahn
George B. Kuehne
Jonathan Levin
David Liftshutz
Malcolm A. Meyer
Randolph K. Miller
Susan W. Morris
Susan B. Patrick
Cynthia L. Perwin
Ricki S. Price
Andrea L. Ravinett
Joseph L Riccardi
Brenda M. Robinson
Christine A. Robinson
Regina J. Rogers
Louise Rosen
James W. Shelby
Bruce R. Smith
Phyllis G. Smith
Carol A. Sowell
Alan 0. Sw/ann
Richard Theiiing
Nancy J. Thompson
Linda R. Torrence
Benes Trus
Martin G. Werkin
Mary A. Whitfield
Deona J. Womack
William M. Yeager
Jeffrey J. Yudin
OMICRON DELTA KAPPA
Purvis W. Bane Henry Koch
Walter E. Blessey, Jr. Steve Mims
George B. Brown, Jr. James Morrill
Harold A. Chapman Colvin Norwood, Jr.
John Devlin William Pitts
Edward B. Dubuisson Wylmer Pool
Ewell Eagan, Jr. Curtis Tatar
Donald G. Ellis Richard Theiiing
Richard Gonzales Dr. Oscar Creech
Terry Habig Dr. Melvin Gruwell
Presley Jackson
MORTAR BOARD
Jean Cooper Frances Brody
Nancy Goheen DIanne Cantella
Clem Goldberger
Catherine Crews
Louise Goldman Janet Hockert
Frances Hays Barbara Stuckey
Carol Hermann Sue Todd
Ricki S. Price
Andrea Ravinette
Ann Timberlake
PHI ETA SIGMA
Richard Ashby Karl Frederickson David Miles
John Audick Daniel Garcia Francis M. Moore
Joseph Baggett Michael Geerken Michael Norton
Martin Binstock Robert C. Goodwin Edward Poitevent
Michael N. Bolton Dennis Gregoire James Price
Robert Brennan Stephen Henry James Riopelle
Joseph R. Brown, Jr. Richard P. Hoover William A. Robinson
David Castanon Wayne Johnston Charles S. Ruark, Jr.
Christopher Church Dennis Kasimiah Timothy Ryan
Lionel M. Cobo Walter Lamia Randlow Smith, Jr.
James M. Collins Lee H. Latimer Dennis Stewart
Richard Cunningham Richard D. Lester Samuel Tilden
James Dalferes Ernest Martin Steven Thorney
William Donnellan, Jr. Clyde W. McCurdy, Jr. Stephen Vann
Lawrence Dries Thomas McNamara. John R. Wiegand
John J. Eick Robert L Mendow Gary Ziegler
Chris Evans
SIGMA PI SIGMA
Bill Bottoms
Bill Boudreaux
James Bowers
V. R. Dave
Michael Donnella, III
James G. Fiasconaro
Arthur J. Gavigan
Walter Grant, III
Barry Haindel
Kenneth Hardy
Robert Hill
Judy Johnson
Larry LeBlanc
Tom J. Magee
Stephen E. Mullins
John H. Myers
Joe Nelson
Woody Norwood
B. D. Papaioannou
Richard Peacock
Robert E. Reagan
Kearny Robert
David C. Russell
Ashton J. Ryan, Jr.
Michael Saizan
Calvin Wellborn
William Yeager
112
BETA BETA BETA
Reevyn Aronson
Delia Bethell
Jacalyn Blye
Thomas Cashio
Jamie Covell
Daryl P. Domning
Mary (Chip) Enzor
Debbie A. Edwards
IVlarl( Feldman
Berandette Freedman
Harold Galena
Ann Geddes
Louise Goldman
Ben Guider, Jr.
Julie Hackney
Kathy Halsey
Vince Hamilton
Dorothy Heath
John King
Michele Levine
Craig Maumus
Sandi McMahan
Martha Mims
Sharon Muenchow
Tira Overstreet
Mike Plotkin
Gary Ring
Chris Robinson
Jane Rush
Barbara Stucky
John Tebbetts
Devra Weinstein
TAU SIGMA DELTA
Howard E. Callihan
Lee R. Connell, Jr.
Robert P. Dean
Eugene H. Fisher
William J. Hudson
Rev. Nelson C. Longnecker
Charles L Lord, Jr.
Martin T. Lott
Bruce E. Sternberg
Christopher C. Thels
John C. Wyle
ALPHA SIGMA LAMBDA
Mrs. Jessie Barringer
Neva Cosgrove
Audrey Cullen
Elaine Dufour
William C. Keiser, Jr.
Thomas Mobley
Ann Rebstock
WHO'S WHO
Richard Mark Alderman Todd Randall Green
Natalie Allison Frances Hays
Ann Armitage Carol Hermann
Dennis Aronson Janet Hockert
Sally Balch Richard Douglas Hurst
Purvis William Bane Laura Ives
John Parker Branham David Raymond Johnson
Kent Brody Sergio Alfredo Leiseca, Jr.
Regina Brody Charles Lord
Thomas Calhoun Matthew Luca
Nina Coleman Malcolm Andrew Meyer
Jean Cooper Donald Mintz
Catherine Crews James Morrill
Sylvia Dreyfus Colvin G. Norwood, Jr.
Edward Benjamin Dubuisson George Gray Plosser
E. E. Timothy Eagan Ricki Price
Barbara Edin Andrea Lynn Ravinett
Ernest Lanier Edwards Gothard Reck
Joseph Carlysle Elliott John Ragan Sanders
Charles Raymond Fernandez John Wyeth Scott
Grey Flowers Ferris George Arthur Seaver, III
James Gerard Fiasconaro Arnold Jay Shelby
Alain Paul Flowers Bruce Sternberg
Bernadette Friedman Barbara Stuckey
Glenn Michael Garte Curtis Elliott Tartar
Nancy Goheen Richard Carl Theiling
Clem Goldberger Ann Timberlake
Louise Goldman Robert Stuart Whitehill
Richard Joseph Gonzalez Richard Pearson Wilson
KAPPA DELTA PHI
Donald Abaunza
John Branham
John Dalton
Steve Davidson
Lanny Edwards
Henry Koch
Conrad Meyer
Woody Norwood
Arthur Seaver, Jr.
Ralph Whalen
Dr. Paul Trickett
ASSETS
Bunny Cornell
Joan DeJean
Christy Donahue
Cathie Dyer
Candy Johnson
Ellen Lewis
Ellen Pressburg
Ellen Ross
Ulla Jo Ule
Dee Unglaub
SIGMA XI Mrs. Janice S. McHale Jack R. Butler
David C. Russell Harold A. Chapman, Jr.
Allen Joseph St. Angelo Guillermo Chaverri
Louis A. Barker Sharon Lynn Salhi John M. Frazer
Claudio Barros Gail Sansone Gerald Giantonio
Dr. John Gil Blackburn James E. Strickland Larry L. Johnson
Dr. John W. Coffey Dr. Paul E. Thetford Charles A. Langhoff
Dr. J. Manuel Denuce Jen-Sie Hsu Tou Ernest E. Lengle, Jr.
Aurelie M. France Jacques P. Vandevoorde Nick L. Lund
Dr. Luther E. Franklin Mickey W. Via Daniel H. Matulionis
Hugo E. Gallo-Torres Adam D. Winters, III Richard E. McCrady
Kenneth A. Hardy Associates: Michael A. Murphy
Shelton E. Hendricks Frances W. Balfour Anna M. Napoli
David G. May Myra 0. Parker Carolyn Neiman
Dr. Asa Mays, Jr. Sidney J. Bennett Mrs. Michele S. Stern
113
BETA GAMMA SIGMA
Philip D. Accardo Walter Thomas Klenz
Edward Josepti Blocher Charles Gilbert Martin
James R. Butterwortli Richard S. Palmer
Robert Leon Draper John Arthur Robbins
John Paul Dreska K. Kultar Singh
Alma Louise Hammett Harry John Smith, III
William Allen Jennings Byron S. Stinson
ALPHA EPSILON
DELTA
Janice Armstrong
David Boudreaux
William H. Briggs
Charles K. Clark
Kenneth A. Cogen
Joseph Dalovisio
Steven Dinerstein
Aubert Dykes
Arnold Finkleman
Robert Flandry
Robert Freedman
Janina Caller
Henry M. Heller
Michael Hoff
Charles Johnson
Allen Kolin
Mark Klempner
James M. Laborde
Peter M. Levine
Kenneth Lichtenstein
David Lubin
Michael Lubin
Lee Meadow
Howard A. Moore
Sharon Muenchow
Alan Myers
Robert Nathan
Michael Perel
William H. Peery
Marc Ringel
Chris Robinson
Paulina A. Rognoni
Harvey Schwartz
Shalom Seltzer
Jason V. Smith
Mark Stein
Charles R. Stewart
Robert K. Thacker
William W. Turner, Jr.
Saidee M. Unglaub
Jon Willen
John Winter
CHI BETA
Leita Aycock
Jean Barton
Barbara Beisner
Susan Clade
Lynn Foster
Katherine Fraser
Jacqueline Friedman
Kathryn Jo Frost
Virginia Harris
Julie Dampen
Judith Ladenberger
Leanne Lipnick
Carole Marks
Mary Meredith
Carol Ann Meyer
Gayle Monroe
Carol Phillips
Pamela Richmond
Jeanne Taylor
Mary V. Wray
TAU BETA PI
Philip E. Baur
Wayne BriJ
Kenneth A DeVun
Maurice J Ducarpe
Richard J. Gonzalez
Danny G. Kilpatrick
William W Kyle, Jr.
Donald J. Michael
William W Powell
Jeffrey A. Roux'
ORDER OF
THE COIF
Oscar W. Boswell
Edward Earl Chase
Stephen G. Davidson
Ernest L. Edwards
Mitchell Herzog
Michael F. Little
Glen G. Magnuson, Jr.
Joel A. Mendler
Donald R. Mintz
Charles W. Nelson, Jr.
James M. Petersen
Professor Thomas J. Andre, Jr.
Professor David Bonderman
Professor L Neville Brown
Professor Harvey C. Couch, III
Professor Alain A. Levasseur
Professor W. A. J. Watson
Honorary:
Grove Stafford
PI SIGMA ALPHA John M. Devlin Melinda McKinnon
Robert Duvic Jane Nahm
Timothy E. Eagan Cynthia L Perwin
James Farwell Frank Petrusak
Robert L. Ainsworth Reuben Friedman Mary Pollingue
Alvin Andrews Joyce Gamble Drew Ranier
David M. Bethune Margaret E. Gates David Rees
Mary A. Bivens Robert H. Girard Robert Rosemont
Steven Bolson Eileen Gleason Dennis F. Schill
Regina Brody Robert M. Hardy, Jr. David Sigler
Walter Brooks Henry Harnage Leonard Simmons
Mary A. Bryant David R. Johnson Donna Solomon
Lorraine G. Caffery Michelle Jumonville William S. Stone
Sarah Churney Linda Lerner Richard C. Theiling
Barbara R. Dean Craig W. Maumus Janet Wessler
Roger M. Deming W. Robert Morgan Gregory D. White
ALPHA OMICRON ALPHA John B. Bass
Arnold H. Blaufuss, Jr.
Charles D. Goodwin
Jefferson F. Hollingsworth
Donnell Schilling
James R. Simmons
Jack M. Covin Charles M. Lindsey Carmela L Tardo
Philip J. Daroca Richard E. McCall Dr. Robert H. Heath
Arthur Adelstein Thomas E. Duncan Alvin M. Douchell Dr. Herbert Ichinose
Arnold Atkins Gary D. Frentz Alvin M. Rouchell Dr. James Reynolds
1M.
LEADERSHIP
HALL OF FAME
Left: Andie Ravinett, Sally Balch, Jeff Yudin, Clem Goldberger, Don Minitz,
"Spot"; Below: Larry Rosenblum, Miss Jean Danieison, Sylvia Dreyfus, Dr.
Stephen Zeff, Kent Brody, Gray Plosser, Frances Hayes, Suzy Schwartz, Nat
' Allison, Hank Harnage, Marilyn Thomas, Jean Cooper.
115
116
MCADEMIC excellence is ostensibly one of the goals towards
which Tulane strives. The Harvard of the South is now a little
tarnished by the encroachment of Berkley on the Bayous, but
both comparisons evoke images of intelligent people doing intel-ligent,
albiet often incomprehensible, things; of faculty expound-ing
exciting ideas and students listening and reacting.
The comparison is not valid except in limited areas. Medi-cine
is unquestionably Tulane's claim to international recognition.
But this has served to justify the concept held by some that
Tulane is a "pre-med" school filled with aspiring young phy-sicians-
to-be. The theatre department, though small (and some
say getting smaller), is still one of the better in the nation.
The math department is internationally known for its topological
research. Due to the performance of its graduates, the School
of Architecture has come to be regarded as probably the finest
in the South and is certainly well respected throughout the
nation. The students in the other divisions of the university
think of it more as a home for itenerant hippies and a hotbed
of radical campus activity, an impression not altered by the
appearance of certain peculiar contraptions from time to time
in front of Stanley Thomas Hall. The architecture students claim
to be demonstrating their individuality and crying out for some
kind of recognition, if only laughter. The Business School, long
acknowledged a fine institution by those involved in business
education, is becoming prominent in managerial circles as well.
The Graduate School has grown quite large, but has not estab-lished
itself as an identifiable unit. It appears to the outsider
a collection of odds and ends in both faculty and facilities.
This may not be the case, but it certainly seems so.
The knowledge, then, is there to be imparted. At least in
some places on campus. Yet there is not the reaction that
you might expect from a "Harvard of the South.'" It seems
that no one is really enthusiastic about his CidSSBS- This
surely is a generalization. Many are not enthused. Many stu-dents
find that the most important thing to consider when
registering for a course is the time it is offered (the later the
better) and the days it is available (MWF is best, TTS, undesir-able,
especially S.) along with the percentage of A's given in
past years.
But it happens that once in a while, the right hour, MWF,
and a great teacher all come together to produce one of those
rare courses that are interesting, exciting, probing; in short,
worthwhile. It might be Bailkey's western civ. or Irion's psy-chology,
or maybe Sanzenbach's French. No matter; it happened,
and everyone is happy, student, teacher, IBM machine. Mom and
Dad. These are the students who learn.
What is unfortunate is that these courses are discovered
by accident; they are the exception to the rule, and the rule
is pretty dull. And it will be so long as there is no way to
recognize those teachers who make going to class in the morning
something more than a chore. A mechanicism for this type
of recognition was proposed this past year by some members
of the student senate in the form of a course evaluation to
be produced annually by students and published in the hope
that those teachers who actually taught would find their class-rooms
full to the point of overflowing, while those who found
three students in attendance on opening day would take time
to find out why.
It is hoped that something of this nature will be done.
117
118
CLASSES
SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE
119
For many architecture freshmen, the first real con-tact
they have with the subject comes with their
first design class, and what an initial contact they
receive, for there to greet them is first year design
professor, Robert Schenker. For the weak-willed and
for those who feel that their opinions are equivalent
to the professors', a week with Professor Schenker is
a long remembered experience. Having no tolerance
for some of the nonsense known to come from young
architects, Schenker quickly sets the record straight
by letting his students know that they know very
little, if anything at all about architecture, and for
them to learn, it will take more absolute dedication
and hard work than they ever believed possible.
Professor Schenker, who graduated from Columbia,
has taught design at Tulane since 1954. He also
teaches a fourth year course on the theory of
architecture. Not a man of many words. Professor
Schenker's communications are succinct and to the
point, letting the student know just how bad or, on
rare occasions, how good his design is. Most students
are not able to realize the value of Professor Schen-ker's
classroom "modus operandi" until they have
advanced past their first year. During that traumatic
period the student is much too busy trying to come
up with designs good enough to warrant Schenker's
approval and living in fear of another bad critique.
Professor Schenker's professional approach to
teaching is educational to the student in itself, for
after graduation the student deals with clients, the
majority of whom are exasperating enough to warrant
the architect's considering murder. Professor Schen-ker
makes the young student justify his design in a
practical manner while retaining the aesthetics, origi-nality,
and creativity incorporated in the work.
I HE other design instructor that first year architec-ture
students must learn to tolerate is Assistant
Professor Robert Helmer. Mr. Helmer does not hold
an architectural degree. In fact, for eleven years
after he began teaching at Tulane in 1954 he taught
Drawing antf Painting. He began work with the first
year design class in 1965.
As an artist Mr. Helmer has established quite a
reputation in New Orleans as well as elsewhere. He
has had one man shows at 331 Gallery and the Orleans
Gallery, of which he is a co-founder, and has had
works displayed in traveling shows in South America,
the Orient, New York, and much of Europe. In 1960,
Mr. Helmer was featured in the art journal, Art in
America.
In class Mr. Helmer gives an impression of great
enthusiasm, except when he finds a design that
offends him, something he manages to find with
tremendous regularity. But give him a good design,
and he is a joy to behold. His comments are usually
loaded, either with suggestions, or if it is a bad day,
sarcasm. Mr. Helmer prefers to approach architecture,
"as a form finding, problem solving activity with the
hope that the acquisition of the ability to first solve
the problem will arm the student with the ability to
face future unknown problems with a high degree of
confidence in his own ability."
Mr. Helmer offers the first year student quite a
refined source of aesthetic tastes and is a great help
in bringing the novice student's design standards
back into reality or out of the doldrums. Another
great service that Mr. Helmer offers the student is
his ability to aid him in their presentation techniques.
With the combination of Professor Schenker and Mr.
Helmer the first year design student receives an
excellent initiation into architectural design besides
having his ego lowered several notches and having
the opportunity to view the sun rise several times
during the course of the year.
UNE of the younger faculty members in the School of
Architecture and easily one of the most popular is
Professor William Turner. Professor Turner, came to
Tulane from Auburn in 1964 holds a Bachelor of
Architecture degree from Clemson College. At Tulane
he is second year design professor and teaches a
fourth year course in- Urban Planning.
His youth and enthusiasm makes him a very vitaf
faculty member as these two assets aid greatly in
his being able to establish communication with the
student. This dialogue with the student is further
aided by Turner's willingness to become involved in
student projects such as last year's Gentle Thursday
and this year's Architect's Week. In his classes Pro-fessor
Turner is known for his long discussion ses-sions
with his students about particular aspects of a
design problem. These disetssions are designed to
get the student to think about the problem, hopefully
in a way that will open his eyes to things he has not
realized before. Other of his long discussions involve
educating the class on building techniques, basic
structural and mechanical rules in construction, and
other conversations involving student's activities, opin-ions
of what they are deriving from their education,
and what they would like to derive from it.
One of the changes Turner as well as the rest of
the faculty, would like to see implemented in the
near future is a revamping of the school's curriculum,
something that is presently under serious considera-tion,
and the establishment at Tulane of a graduate
school in architecture. The establishment of such a
school at Tulane would fill a great void in architec-tural
education in the south, for the great preponder-ance
of respected architectural graduate schools are
in the northeastern United States.
Professor Turner's refreshing attitude toward stu-dents
and their opinions and his cognizance of prob-lems
in the immediate area around Tulane that his
students can experience first hand serve to exemplify
not only the vital role that the School of Architecture
can play in the University, but also in New Orleans.
R|
^^^^^^^^H
One of the more exciting and stimulating design
professors at Tulane is Professor Wllford F. Calongne
who teaches third year and also serves the school as
assistant dean. IVlr, Calongne has been teaching de-sign
at Tulane for fifteen years. He received a B.S.
degree from Tulane in 1944 and a Bachelor of Science
in Architecture in 1947. In addition to his duties at
the school he has maintained a private practice of
varying proportions in New Orleans since 1947.
Without a doubt one of the favorite and most re-spected
professors in the school, Professor Calongne
combines a tremendous design ability of his own with
an uncanny ability to communicate with the student
concerning a design proposal. As a result, Mr. Ca-longne
is able to draw untapped potential from a
student which results in pleasant surprises for both
the faculty and student.
Mr. Calongne's design problems are known among
students for the interest they can stimulate in the
designer and the fact that Calongne expects the de-signer
to use as much imagination and originality as
possible. At times students may feel that Mr. Ca-longne's
problems border on fantasy and that a more
(ealistic approach should be taken. But as any pro-fessionat
architect knows, it is very seldom that one
gets a client who is really willing to let the archi-tect
use his imagination, so when that rare individual
does appear the architect must have an imagination
that has been developed. It is certainly reasonable
to suppose that an imaginatively trained architect
will produce better work than one who was weaned
on the design of F.H.A. and builder's homes, Graphic
Standard's details, or textbook design procedures.
CLASSES
ARCHITECTURE FACULTY
121
ARCHITECTURE
SENIORS
«s^ «»1
m^^
First Row:
CARLOS A. ARCHILLA, Mayaquez, Puerto Rico,
RICHARD RAWLS BARNETT, Plant City, Fla.
ROBERT P. DEAN, JR., New Orleans, La.i J.Y.A.; Sailing Club.
Second Row:
KELEAL HASSIN, JR., Yazoo City,
WILLIAM J. HUDSON, Shelbyville,
STEPHEN ISOM, Lagrange Park, I
Miss.: Kappa Sigma.
Tenn.; Tau Sigma Delta.
I.; Sigma Nu.
Third Row:
ALLAN M. LEVY, Memphis, Tenn.; Kiosk Club; Vice-President, School of Archi-tecture:
Vice-President, American Institute of Architects; President Senior
Class, School of Architecture.
CHARLES LORD, New Orleans, La.; Student Senate; President, School of Archi-tecture;
HULLABALOO cartoonist; Kiosk Club; Sailing Club.
DONALD A. MAGINNIS, III, New Orleans, La.; American Institute of Architects;
Vice-President, Senior Class; Delta Kappa Epsilon.
Fourth Row:
R. H. MONSARRAT, Memphis, Tenn.
JAMES L. SW/OOP, New Orleans, La.; Kappa Alpha.
122
First Row:
JEFF ARMITAGE, East Lansing, Micli. Freshman
WILLIAM A. BAER, St. Louis, Mo.; Sophomore
RICHARD BALDERSTON, Glen Mills, Pa.; Junior
ARCHITECTURE
UNDERGRADUATES
i
Second Row:
RONALD BARLOW, Annandale, Va.; Freshman
RICHARD BAUMANN, Cranford, N. J.; Junior
GERALD W. BILLES, Butler, Pa.: Junior
A^^
Third Row:
JON BLOSS BLEHAR, Dallas, Texas; Sophomore
LINDA ANNE BRALEY, Bryan, Texas; Junior
KENNETH T. BROWN, Washington, D. C; Fourth Year
Fourth Row:
ROGER BROWN, Metairie. La.; Sophomore
SHELDON HOWARD CANTOR, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Freshman
JOHN CAREY, Bethesda, Md.; Freshman
Fifth Row:
BENJAMIN PAUL CHAIT, Miami, Fla.; Junior
RICHARD J. CHARLESWORTH, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Junior
ALVIN J. COX, New Orleans, La.; Freshman L^i^ii^
Sixth Row:
WALTER M. DALY, Manhasset, N. Y.; Freshman
MANVEL DE LEMOS, San Juan, P. R.; Sophomore
ROBERT DE MARCO, Schenectady, N. Y.; Sophomore
Seventh Row:
MICHAEL J. EWIN, Harahan, La.; Freshman
NEAL FLEMING, Bethesda, Md.; Sophomore
PAT FLORY, New Iberia, La.; Sophomore
1^ 1^
A A^
^ 123
ARCHITECTURE
UNDERGRADUATES
aMA^^
First Row;
JOHN GOLDSTEIN, St. Louis, IVIo.; Freshman
LEWIS A. GRAEBER, iVIarks, IVIiss.; Sophomore
CHRISTOPHER GREEN, St. Thomas, V. I.; Junior
Second Row:
JOHN HANNA, Maplewood, La.; Sophomore
ERIC V. HOSKINSON, Denver, Colo.; Junior.
ROBERT HUMPHREY, Lake Worth, Fla.; Junior
Third Row:
EDWARD JENDREY, Keene, Va.; Fourth Year
THOMAS H. JOHNSTON, Kansas City, Mo.; Junior
JOAN KING, Alexandria, La.; Freshman
Fourth Row:
CHRIS KNIGHT, Short Hills, N. J.; Freshman
WILLIAM P. LAMMEY, Cinnaminson, N. J.; Junior
RIC LEBOEUF, Scotia, N. Y.; Junior
Fifth Row:
PAUL H. LEONARD, Jennings, Ala.; Freshman
DALE LONG, Grosse Pointe, Mich.; Freshma'n
STEPHEN MANN, Houston, Texas; Sophomore
Sixth Row:
RICHARD C. MAXWELL, New Orleans, La.; Fourth Year
CHARLES McGEE, Shreveport, La.; Freshman
GEORGE MILLER, Tulsa, Okla.; Sophomore
Seventh Row:
MICHAEL NIUS, Atlanta, Ga,; Sophomore
JOE OSBORNE, Middletown, Ohio; Freshman
GERALD S. PFEFFER, Englewood, N. J.; Fourth Year
124
First Row:
HAROLD PIQUE, JR., New Orleans, La.; Freshman
JEFF RAYMOND, North Miami Beach, Fla.; Sophomore
JAMES S. REID, St. Louis, Mo.; Freshman
JAMES G. ROGERS, III, San Diego, Calif.; Junior
Second Row:
LOUIS ROVELLI, Albany, N. Y.; Freshman
JIM SALMI, Denver, Colo.; Sophomore
MARY D. SCHAUB, Gambrius, Md.; Sophomore
PETER A. SCHLESINGER, Auburn, Ala.; Sophomore
Third Row:
JOHN A. SCHUPP, JR., Atlanta, Ga.; Junior
JOHN SCURRY, Dallas, Texas; Junior
EVAN SOULE, New Orleans, La.; Freshman
DALE SPIZER, New Orleans, La.; Sophomore
Fourth Row:
WILLIAM STALEY, Nashville, Tenn.; Sophomore
JERRY STEPHENSON, Valley Lee, Md.; Sophomore
STEPHEN L. SUPLEE, Clayton, N. J.; Sophomore
SALLY SWEENY, Auburn, Ala.; Freshman
ARCHITECTURE
UNDERGRADUATES
4iik
^Hi^'
1-tss «^ j^i
'-
...... ;
^\
f ::''"'^
V'
%
Fifth Row:
ANDREW TRIVERS, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Fourth Year
GARY UHLIG, Waltham, Mass.; Freshman
RANDOLPH VON BARYMANN, San Jose, Costa, Rica; Sophomore
RALPH E. WAFER, Shreveport, La.; Junior
Sixth Row:
NORMAND GEORGE WILKINSON, Longview, Texas; Freshman
ROBERT J. WILSON, JR., Little Rock, Ark.; Freshman
KAREN WISZNIA, Corpus Christi, Texas; Freshman
BESSIE WYMAN, West Point, Miss.; Sophomore
Seventh Row:
DALE ZINN, Santa Fe, N. M.; Freshman
125
126
127
Dr. CHARLES PEACOCK began his career as a high
school teacher. He also taught in a country school
where all eight grades were taught in one room
before going to graduate school to obtain his Doctor-ate
in Physics, so he has been directly involved with
education on all levels. One point he feels the pro-fessor
must always l(eep in mind is that while
abstraction is a part of learning, people need some
sort of model to handle and to reason with. Conse-quently,
he tries to deal with tangible models as far
as he can in his physics courses. Students familiar
with first year college physics will recall the pendu-lums
and springs that littered the classroom. While
it is simple to demonstrate Hookes law and Newtons
laws of motion, the manifestation of phase space of
six dimensions and quantum mechanics becomes more
difficult. Dr. Peacock manages to bring these concepts
down to real terms, to the delight of his contemporary
physics students.
Because science has become such a large part of
education in the last twenty years, Dr. Peacock feels
that all "educated" people today should have some
knowledge of science. He likes to think of physics as
the parent science, because it is related to all the
other sciences, since they utilize methods devised by
physicists in their research techniques. Dr. Peacock
also is in favor of the concept of a physics course
for the humanities. He does feel that such a project
would be difficult for a small department, such as
the one at Tulane, which must play several roles in
the university. The department helps train pre-med
and other sicence students, as well as its own majors,
so in the past its faculty has not been able to give
sufficient attention to the bridging of such a gap
between the humanities and the sciences. In such a
course, the mathematical language would be soft-peddled
to the extent that the student not trained
in mathematics could still grasp the basic concepts
of physics.
I WO years after Dr. Milton Fingerman received his
Ph.D. from Northwestern in 1952, he came to Tulane.
He came a day early for his interview and spent the
whole day in the French Quarter, after which he de-cided
to accept any offer made him. He spent the
two years prior to his arrival at Tulane in the army,
during the course of which he was concerned with
biological warfare, a subject In which he still re-tains
a vital interest. Dr. Fingerman is ambivalent in
his feelings toward current efforts to stop biological
warfare and to end secret research on university
campuses. He feels that such work is necessary for
national security, but would not do classified research
himself unless he felt obliged to because of an all-out
war.
Part of his adversity towards such classified re-search
stems from the enjoyment he receives from
talking about his work. Dr. Fingerman is presently
studying the color changes in fiddler crabs and craw-fish.
Every animal that has been investigated, and
many plants as well, have built in biological clocks.
Dr. Fingerman, for example, has kept his crabs in
total darkness for 44 days, and they have continued
to function normally. There is interest in this type
of study today because of space flight, and the at-tempts
that are being made to determine what type
of schedule keeps astronauts most efficient. Such
study is also important for jet travel in which individ-uals
are moved quickly across time zones. After such
rapid changes, human biological clocks often require
days to readjust.
STUDENTS should take more initiative to come and
talk with professors. They sometimes are apologetic
about taking up even a little of a teacher's time, but
it seems to me that they are paying for it."
Maybe it is this personable attitude, above all else,
that has made Dr. Arthur L. Irion one of the most
likeable of the university's faculty members. A gradu-ate
of the University of Missouri who received his
Ph.D. at the University of Iowa, he is one of the
most well-known and dynamic members of the Psy-chology
Department.
As any undergraduate who has taken Introductory
Psychology knows, Irion is one of the all too few
interesting teachers to whom any student could pos-sibly
be exposed. No matter how dry the subjects
of his lectures might seem — from etiology to
Mongolid idiocy — he manages to make them both
interesting and entertaining. Perhaps it is the lively
intonation he puts into every sentence. Perhaps it is
his sense of humor which permeates into stories
ranging from Pavlov's misadventures with his dogs to
Irion's own encountered while building a harpsichord.
Or perhaps it is his own personal informality which
enables students to approach his subject with sharper
interest, well-defined questions and much more aca-demic
ease.
Eclipsing all of these aspects, however, is still that
basic quality of Irion's character — his deep and
personal interest in his students. It i? an interest
which goes well beyond his classroom. An interest
perhaps based in the study of psychology, but none
the less still a part of his nature. And it is this basic
interest which makes him more than a teacher in the
eyes of his students.
n>
ARTS AND SCIENCES
FACULTY
Dr. HANS iONASSEN is one of those rare individuals
who combines tlie abilities of a seasoned and In-ventive
scientist with the communicative powers of
a great teacher. There are many fine chemists and a
number of good teachers, but the great chemist-teacher
(or biologist-teacher, or scientist-teacher) is
a bit uncommon.
Why bother teaching chemistry to freshmen whose
only interest in the subject is eight required credit
hours?. Asl( Dr. Jonassen and you will get an im-passioned
explanation of the importance of the
sciences In general and the scientific method in
particular. "Look at your clothes! The buttons are
plastic, the material In your shirt Is synthetic. Your
shoes may be the product of an industrial chemist
rather than an aged cow." After a few lectures along
this line, not forgetting the elements of the subject (if
you will forgive the Interviewer's pun) the passive
student has come to enjoy his hour in Richardson
Chemistry, mainly because of the enthusiasm Cr.
Jonassen exhibits in the classroom. Here is a Ph.D.
chemist getting all worked up over the symetry of
the elementary Bohr atom. What student could stand
by and let himself be left out of what must surely
be an exciting excursion into the world of the
microscopic?
Dr. Jonassen has an impressive record: Ph.D. from
the University of Illinois, Co-Editor of the seven vol-ume
series, "Techniques of Inorganic Chemistry",
adviser to the U.S. Department of Naval Weapons, and
author of over 120 professional papers.
Hans Jonassen, one of Tulane's outstanding teach-ers,
a man who has made Chemistry and the sciences
something more than a requirement for thousands of
Tulanians.
ssxs^stsixi^ ^r«4K
Dr. frank BIRTEL of the Arts & Sciences math de-partment
feels that in undergraduate education it is
the teacher's responsibility to conduct a type of
revival meeting. Dr. Birtel is convinced that the
student retains only a small amount of information
from the course itself, and failure on the part of the
teacher to motivate the student to pursue the study
further can be equated with failure in the course
With this in mind. Dr. Birtel tries to conduct a mathe-matical
revival meeting, so that his students could
almost say "Amen, Brother" at the end of each hour.
He believes that it is important for an undergraduate
to see an individual become excited with his specialty
and somehow involve the class in his excitement.
Mathematics can be thought of as a real index to
the culture of a society. As Dr. Birtel observes, times
in history when mathematical activity was at its peak
have also been times when general intellectual activity
was at its peak. Math departments tend to neglect
their service courses to the humanities, often be-cause
the humanities do not demand them.
In connection with this need, Dr. Birtel advocates
two possible new types of math courses. One such
course would involve the selection of a single prob-lem
solved in the last twenty-five years, and working
back from the solution to the problem itself. The
student completing this course would know only a
single problem but he would know it in the way a
mathematician knows it. Another course would con-sist
of nothing but counter-examples. Since the
student would learn no theorems, he would be frantic
to find something true in his mathematical system.
1-29
I F something interferes with your routine, it may
irritate you for a short time, but you quickly become
accustomed to It." This statement may not seem par-ticularly
striking, but you must bear in mind that It
was made by Dr. Hugh Rankin, with reference to the
temporary (we hope) state of the Tulane History De-partment,
whose classes will be scattered over the
whole campus when the familiar History building is
torn down next year to make room for the new
science complex. This stoic attitude might be ex-pected
of a man who has had as diverse a career
as has Dr. Rankin. During the depression, he worked
in a clothing store. At one point during the Second
World War he supervised construction work In the
Army, at which time he sustained several Injuries
which he credits with his decision to enter the
teaching profession. After being released from the
service, he returned to college and studied history,
with emphasis on colonial development in America.
In class, Dr. Rankin displays the same kind of toler-ance
that he shows for the uprooting of his depart-ment.
A student need never fear being embarrassed
for expressing an idea or notion that might bring
a torrent of scorn from some professors. Each idea
is explored and reasons found for its validity or the
lack thereof. Rankin is one who maintains that no
absolute statements can be made about great men
from a study of their writings, just as one cannot
prove any thing startling by quoting the Bible; there
are always quotations supporting the opposite view-point.
Dr. Rankin has never lost his enthusiasm for
athletics, in which he participated extensively while
in college. He now serves as faculty chairman for
athletics and accompanies the varsity teams on many
of their out-of-town engagements. He finds that this
association with young people, along with that in the
classroom, has the distinctly desirable effect of
keeping him young. Though he values the insight into
young minds that his position allows him, he is quick
to point out that he does not necessarily agree. But
these points of disagreement lead to some of the
more satisfying discussions that a student will likely
find at Tulane.
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
First Row:
HAROLD W. AARONS, Denver, Colo.; J.Y.A.; Scholars and Fellows; University
Orchestra; Tulane University Theatre, Treasurer-Historian; Menuet House Coun-cil;
Inter-House Council.
ISAAC ADAMS, New Orleans, La.; President, Irby House Council; Vice-President,
Inter-House Council; Chairman, Tulane House Council Judiciary Committee.
RICHARD ALDERMAN, Pittsford, N. Y.
Second Row:
HARRY STILES ANDERSON, Clarksdale, IVliss.; Arnold Air Society; Scabbard and
Blade; Air Force ROTC; Kappa Sigma.
JOHN W. ANDERSON, New Orleans, La.
AUBRA H. ANTHONY, JR.; Tulane Scholars Program; Scabbard and Blade; Arnold
Air Society; Treasurer, Kappa Sigma.
Third Row:
ALEX R. ASHY, Eunice, La.; Student Welfare Board; President, Alpha Sigma Phi.
ALVIN J. AUBRY, JR., New Orleans, La.
THOMAS BARR, New Orleans, La.; Kappa Alpha.
Fourth Row:
JONATHAN BARRON, New Rochelle, N. Y.; Project Opportunity; JAMBALAYA
Staff, Sports Editor.
CHRISTOPHER S. BECKER, Brownsville, Texas; Scabbard and Blade.
GILBERTO F. BENITEZ, Santurce, P. R.; Soccer Club.
Fifth Row:
DAVID BERCUSON, North Miami, Fla.; President, Tulane Pre-Law Students;
President, Derickson House; Inter-House Council; Varsity Swimming; Lyceum
Committee; Sailing Club.
GEORGE BISCHOF, New Orleans, La.
GEORGE M. BLACKBURN, Dearborn, Mich.
Sixth Row:
JAMES N. BLAIN, Metairie, La.; Pi Kappa Alpha.
MARK BLANK, JR., Jenkintown, Pa.; Cactus; WTUL; A Capella Choir.
JERALD P. BLOCK, Thibodaux, La.
Seventh Row:
STEVEN BOLSON, Teaneck, N. J.; Student Senate; Project Opportunity; Presi-dent,
Tau Epsilon Phi.
FRANK C. BOUCEK, Coral Gables, Fla.
CREED W. BRIERRE, New Orleans, La.; Kappa Alpha.
130
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
First Row:
WILLIAM V. BRIERRE, JR., New Orleans, La.; Kappa Alpha.
WALTER R. BROOKS, Metairie, La.; Pi Sigma Alpha.
JOHN C. BROWER, Portland, Ore.
Second Row:
GEORGE B. BROWN, Gainesville, Fla.
NELSON C. BROWN, New Orleans, La.; Student Welfare Committee; Project
Opportunity; Assistant Manager, WTUL; HULLABALOO.
RONALD J. BROWN, Paragould, Ark.; Phi Eta Sigma; Tulane Scholars Program.
Third Row:
EUGENE CAMPAGNOLA, Beverly Farms, Mass.; Navy ROTC; Intramural Athletics
Council; Phi Delta Theta.
LOUIS CAMPOMENOSI, Arlington, Va.; Varsity Football.
STANLEY D. CARSON, Miami, Okla.; Alpha Chi Sigma; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Pan-hellenic
Council; Kappa Sigma.
Fourth Row:
DAVID CARTER, Jacksonville, Fla.; Pre-Law Society; Latin American Organization;
Cosmopolitan Committee; Sailing Club; Sigma Nu.
ROBERT J. CATANZARO, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.; Beta Beta Beta; Pre Medical
Society; Pi Kappa Alpha.
HUGH E. CHERRY, Anderson, Ind.; Army ROTC; Kappa Alpha.
Fifth Row:
MARTIN L. CLAXTON, New Orleans, La.; Young Conservatives Club; Young
Republicans Club.
STANLEY J. COHEN, Atlanta, Ga.; Zeta Beta Tau.
SCOTT E. COLEMAN, New York, N. Y.; Pre Medical Society; Lagniappes Com-mittee;
Alpha Epsilon Pi.
Sixth Row:
ANGUS B. COMPSON, Rye, N. Y.
CHARLES R. CONEWAY, JR., Houston, Texas; Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
MICHAEL E. CONROY, Chicago, III.; Latin American Organization; Volunteers
International Association.
Seventh Row:
ROBERT MICHAEL COSGROVE, New Orleans, La.; A.S.M.E.; Anchor and Chain
Society; Intramural Track; Beta Theta Pi.
TIMOTHY COUGHLIN, Dayton, Ohio; Alpha Delta Epsilon; Varsity Football; All
S.E.C. Academic Team; Freshman Track; Project Opportunity; Dean's list;
Treasurer, Phi Delta Theta.
GEORGE R. R. CRUCE, Houston, Texas; Sailing Club.
131
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
5«*ll'l;T;:::t'!
First Row:
WILLIAM V. DALFERES, JR., New Orleans, La.; Hospitality Committee; Green-backers;
Recreation Committee; Pi Kappa Alpha.
STEPHEN DANNEMAN, Atlanta, Ga.; Pre Medical Society; Publicity Committee;
Sigma Alpha Mu.
ORIN DAVIDSON, Germantown, Tenn.; President, Sigma Chi.
Second Row:
ROBERT KENT DAWSON, Scottsboro, Ala.; Scabbard and Blade; Pre Medical
Society; Fellowship of Christian Athletes; Vice-President, Senior Class.
BRUCE DEBARTOLO, New Orleans, La.; Sigma Gamma Epsilon; Freshman Football.
DAVID DENNING, St. Louis, Mo.; Scabbard and Blade; Phi Delta Theta.
Third Row:
JOHN M. DEVLIN, Houston, Texas; Omicron Delta Kappa; Pi Sigma Alpha;
Pre Law Society; Scabbard and Blade; Commander of Arnold Air Society;
Senior Advisor, Bechtel House; Assistant Director, Robert Sharp Hall; Vice-
President, Phi Kappa Sigma.
PETE DIFFLEY, Pensacola, Fla.; Vice-President, Scabbard and Blade; Phi Kappa
Sigma.
DARYL P. DOMNING, Biloxi, Miss.; Beta Beta Beta; Sigma Gamma Epsilon;
Sailing Club; Newman Club.
Fourth Row:
G. PAUL DORSEY, New Orleans, La.; Alpha Phi Omega; Pre Medical Society;
Sailing Club.
ROBERT DUHON, Abbeville, La.; Varsity Football; Baseball.
GARY LOUIS DUKER, New Orleans, La.; Arnold Air Society; Scabbard and Blade;
Air Force ROTC, Drum and Bugle Corps.
Fifth Row:
ROBERT EISENBERG, Champaign, III.; Pre Medical Society; Lyceum Committee;
Lacrosse Team; Vice-President, Sigma Alpha Mu.
DAVID ALLEN ELDRIDGE, Dallas, Texas; Greenbackers, Recreation Committee,
President, House Council.
MICHAEL THOMAS ELIAS, Laurel, Miss.; Pershing Rifles Drill Team; Pi Kappa
Alpha.
Sixth Row:
JOSEPH D. EUBANKS, Honolulu, Hawaii.
VICTOR M. EUMONT, JR., New Orleans, La.; Varsity Football.
ERIC EVANS, Lexington, Ky.; Varsity Football; Fellowship of Christian Athletes.
Seventh Row:
CLOYD L. EZELL, JR., Ocean Springs, Miss.; Tulane Scholars Program; Baptist
Student Union.
LESLIE G. FEIN, Little Rock, Ark.; Tulane Honor Board; Secretary, Junior Class;
HULLABALOO; Greenbackers; Zeta Beta Tau.
MARK ROBERT FELDMAN, Creve Coeur, Mo.; Beta Beta Beta; Pre Medical
Society; Dean's list; Tulane Band; Tulanians; Campus Nite; Tau Epsilon Phi.
132
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
First Row:
GEORGE FERTIHA, New York, N. Y.; Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
JOHN M. FITCH, Memphis, Tenn.; Phi Eta Sigma; Scholars and Fellows; Latin
American Organization; Project Opportunity; Tulane Band; HULLABALOO; Air
Force Drum and Bugle Corps; Treasurer, Newman Club.
MICHAEL K. FITZPATRICK, New Orleans, La.; Varsity Football; Greenbackers;
House Council; Newman Club; Sailing Club; Kappa Alpha.
Second Row:
ALAIN PAUL FLOWERS, Orlando, Fla.; Scholars and Fellows; Air Force ROTC,
Drum and Bugle Corps; Scabbard and Blade; Student Senate; Student Senate
Welfare Committee; JAMBALAYA Staff; Campus Nite; McBryde House Council;
Lyceum Committee.
MICHAEL D. FOWLER, Cocoa, Fla.; Delta Tau Delta.
AARON J. FRIEDMAN, Houston, Texas; Alpha Phi Omega, Chairman, Padohad;
JAMBALAYA Staff; University Center Board Staff; Student Activities Key; House
Council. JIM £^t^
Third Row:
REUBEN FRIEDMAN, New Orleans, La.; Eta Sigma Phi; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi
Sigma Alpha; Tulane Scholars Program; Hillel Foundation; Pre Law Society.
LAWRENCE FULLERTON, St. Petersburg, Fla ; President, Scabbard and Blade;
Inter House Council; Delta Tau Delta.
HAROLD GALENA, Worcester, Mass.; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Treasurer, Pre Medical
Society; J.Y.A.; Spotlighters Committee; Tau Epsilon Phi.
Fourth Row:
GARY GARSON, West Palm Beach, Fla.
STEVEN GINSBERG, Ft, Worth, Texas; Psi Chi; Greenbackers; Lagniappes Com-mittee;
Sigma Alpha Mu.
MICHAEL GOLDSTEIN, Ballwin, Md.; Co-Captain, Varsity Swim Team; All SEC.
Swim Team; "T" Club; Sigma Alpha Mu.
Fifth Row:
ROBERT GORAL, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
CRAIG A. GRAY, Baltimore, Md.
BRUCE E. GUIDRY, Houma, La.; Phi Eta Sigma; Varsity Football.
Sixth Row:
WILLIAM C. GUILLORY, JR., Pineville, La.; Pan-hellenic Council, Sigma Chi.
PAUL S. GULBAS, El Paso, Texas; Beta Beta Beta; Pre Medical Society;
Recreation Committee; Student Directory Staff; Alpha Epsilon Pi.
RONALD F. GURTLER, New Orleans, La.; Arnold Air Society; Air Force ROTC;
Kappa Alpha.
Seventh Row:
CHARLES R. HALL, Weston, Mo.; Delta Tau Delta.
VINCENT D. HAMILTON, Yuba City, Calif.; Beta Beta Beta; Pre Medical Society;
Dean's List; Delta Tau Delta.
WADE HANKS, Kaplan, La.; Sigma Chi.
133
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
M^
First Row:
STEVE HARLAN, Diamond Head, Hawaii; Zeta Beta Tau.
HANK HARNAGE, St. Petersburg, Fla.; Omicron Delta Kappa; Plii Eta Sigma;
President, Student Body; President, University Center Board; Tulanians; Cheer-leader;
Who's Who; Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
STEVE A. HARNETT, New Orleans, La.; Varsity Football.
Second Row:
STEPHEN HEFFNER, Plantation, Fla,
THOMAS M. HERZ, Coral Gables, Fla.; J.Y.A.; Tulane Scholars Program; Music
Committee; Orchestra.
ERIC HOLTER, Redington Beach, Fla.; Arnold Air Society.
Third Row:
JAMES PRESLEY JACKSON, Litte Rock, Ark.; Vice President, Alpha Epsilon Delta;
Vice-President Sophomore Class; President, Junior Class; Student Senate; Vice-
President, Kappa Sigma.
RICHARD JACOBS, New Orleans, La.; Phi Eta Sigma; Tulane Scholars Program;
J.Y.A.; Zeta Beta Tau.
JAMES F. JANCIK, Caldwell, Texas; Co-Captain, Varsity Football; Academic Ail-
American.
Fourth Row:
DAVID R. JOHNSON, Bartlesville, Okla.; Pi Sigma Alpha; Tulane Scholars Pro-gram;
Arnold Air Society; Scabbard and Blade; Air Force ROTC Distinguished
Military Cadet; Tulanians.
DENNIS S. KAHANE, New York City, N. Y.
DOUGLAS G. KAHN, Miami Beach, Fla.; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Phi Eta Sigma;
Tulane Scholars Program; J.Y.A.; Pre Medical Society.
Fifth Row:
DONALD N. KEARNS, Baton Rouge, La.
DALE R. KILPATRICK, South Orange, N. J ; Secretary, Scabbard and Blade;
Chaplain, Arnold Air Society; President, Young Republicans.
HENRY J. KOCH, Demopolis, Ala.; President, House Council; Inter-House Council;
Senior Advisor; Honor Board; Vice-President, Junior Class; Lagniappes Com-mittee;
Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Sixth Row:
JAY D. KRAVITZ, University Heights, Ohio; J.Y.A.; Tulane Scholars Program;
Recreation Committee; Sigma Alpha Mu.
GEORGE B KUEHNE, New Orleans, La.; J.Y.A.; Tulane Scholars Program.
BENNY KUPIS, Roselle, N. J.
Seventh Row:
J, LANCE LALOR, Houston, Texas; Sigma Chi.
GERALD DENNIS LANCE, Huntington Beach, Calif.
GERALD LATTER, New Orleans, La.; Tau Beta Pi; Vice-President, Senior Class;
A.S.M.E., Intramural Athletic Manager.
134
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
First Row:
SERGIO A. LEISECA, JR., Bethesda, Md.; Pi Sigma Alplia; Dean's List; Secretary,
Who's Who Committee; Elections Committee; A & S Senator; President, Pi
Kappa Alpha.
JONATHAN LEVIN, New Orleans, La.; Phi Eta Sigma; Pi Mu Epsilon; Scholars
and Fellows; A Cappella Choir; Hillel Foundation.
NEIL MARSHAL LEVINE, Miami, Fla.; President, Pre Medical Society; Hillel
Foundation Student Executive Board.
Second Row:
DAVID LIFSHUTZ, San Antonio, Texas; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Phi Eta Sigma;
Tulane Scholars Program; Pre Medical Society.
DAVID C. LONG, New Orleans, La.; Alpha Phi Omega; President, Anchor and
Chain; Sailing Club.
S. L. LOWENSTEIN, JR., Nashville, Tenn.; Vice-President, Phi Eta Sigma; Green-backers;
Sailing Club; Zeta Beta Tau.
Third Row:
BILL LUNCEFORD, Sardis, Miss.; Football; Football Manager.
PAUL C. LYNSKEY, Miami, Fla.
ROBERT M. MAHONY, New Orleans, La.; Delta Kappa Epsilon.
Fourth Row:
RONALD M. MASSEY, Macon, Ga.; Pre Medical Society; Psi Chi.
DAVID MICHAEL MATHES, Orlando, Fla.; Alpha Tau Omega.
CRAIG W. MAUMUS, New Orleans, La.; Alpha Epsilon Delta; Beta Beta Beta;
Eta Sigma Phi; Phi Sigma Alpha; Dean's List; Conservative Club; Newman Club;
Sailing Club; Pre Medical Society.
Fifth Row:
HOWARD M. MAZIAR, Atlanta, Ga.; Psi Chi; Sigma Alpha Mu.
HENRY A. McCartney, New Orleans, La.; Beta Theta Pi.
WILLIAM D. McCLURE, JR., Tulsa, Okla.; Sigma Chi.
Sixth Row:
ALBERT MICHAEL MclLWAIN, Jackson, Miss.; Air Force ROTO; Pi Kappa Alpha.
WILLIAM G. McLAIN, McComb, Miss.; Delta Kappa Epsilon.
JOHN GUTIERREZ McLURE, Alexandria, La.; Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Seventh Row:
WILLIAM A. MEBANE, New Orleans,
FRED R. METZINGER, New Orleans,
MALCOLM A. MEYER, New Orleans,
Phi Eta Sigma; Track Team; Beta Theta Phi.
La.; Pre Medical Society; Sigma Chi.
La.; Varsity Baseball.
La.; Eta Sigma Phi; Omicron Delta Kappa;
135
ARTS AND SCIENCES
SENIORS
First Row:
WILL CRAIG MEYER, Silver Spring, Md.
RANDOLPH KENT MILLER, Warren, Ohio; Phi Beta Kappa; Phi Eta Sigma; Dean's
List; Tulane Scholars Program; A. U.S.A.; Scabbard and Blade; Army ROTC;
Brigade Commander; Latin American Organization; Soccer Team; Arab Club.
J. RALPH MILLET, JR., Metairie, La.
Second Row:
MICHAEL R. MILLICAN, Houston, Texas; Sigma Nu.
FRED MORGAN, Stone Mountain, Ga.
CARTER MORSE, Seneca Point, Naples, N. Y.; President, A & S Senior Class;
Soccer; Kappa Sigma.
Third Row:
F. SCHOn MUMME, JR., New Orleans, La.; Varsity Football; Art Club; Alpha
Tau Omega,
DAVID MURPHY, Fort Worth, Texas.
DOUGLAS S. MYERS, Norfolk, Va.; Sports Editor, JAMBALAYA; HULLABALOO;
Publicity Committee; Zeta Beta Tau.
Fourth Row:
GUY M. NELSON, III, New Orleans, La.
JONATHAN D. F, NELSON, Miami, Fla.; Hospitalit